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  2. Management of hearing loss - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Management_of_hearing_loss

    Despite these benefits, hearing aid use remains low among older adults in the United States with less than 20% of those with hearing loss reportedly using them in a nationally representative survey. [10] Furthermore, up to 40% of adults who have hearing aids for hearing loss fail to use them, or do not use them to their full effect. [11]

  3. Aural rehabilitation - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Aural_Rehabilitation

    Audiologists and speech-language pathologists are professionals who typically provide aural rehabilitation components. The audiologist may be responsible for the fitting, dispensing and management of a hearing device, counseling the client about his or her hearing loss, the application of certain processes to enhance communication, and the skills training regarding environmental modifications ...

  4. Hearing loss - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Hearing_loss

    Post-lingual deafness is hearing loss that is sustained after the acquisition of language, which can occur due to disease, trauma, or as a side-effect of a medicine. Typically, hearing loss is gradual and often detected by family and friends of affected individuals long before the patients themselves will acknowledge the disability. [42]

  5. Audiology - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Audiology

    They dispense, manage, and rehabilitate hearing aids and assess candidacy for and map hearing implants, such as cochlear implants, middle ear implants and bone conduction implants. They counsel families through a new diagnosis of hearing loss in infants, and help teach coping and compensation skills to late-deafened adults.

  6. Patient education - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Patient_education

    Preoperative patient education helped patients with their decision-making process by informing them of factors related to pain, limb loss, and functional restriction faced after amputation. [ 15 ] In the case of arthritis, patient education was found to be administered through three methods, including individual face to face meetings with ...

  7. Noise-induced hearing loss - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Noise-induced_hearing_loss

    TTS (Temporary Threshold Shift) is a temporary change of the hearing threshold the hearing loss that will be recovered after a few hours to couple of days. Also called auditory fatigue. TTS is also measured in decibels. In addition to hearing loss, other external symptoms of an acoustic trauma can be: Tinnitus [10] Otalgia [11] Hyperacusis [10]

  8. Recruitment (medicine) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Recruitment_(medicine)

    Recruitment thus remains one of the principal challenges of hearing aid rehabilitation, and it is responsible for a common phenomenon most clinicians who deal with hearing loss have witnessed or experienced: at average speaking levels, an individual with recruitment may ask a speaker to talk more loudly, yet with even a slight increase in ...

  9. Diagnosis of hearing loss - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Diagnosis_of_hearing_loss

    Hearing loss can be ranked differently according to different organisations; and so, in different countries different systems are in use. Hearing loss may be ranked as slight, mild, moderate, moderately severe, severe or profound as defined below: [medical citation needed] Slight: between 16 and 25 dB HL; Mild: for adults: between 26 and 40 dB HL