Many people loss their hearing after
they have learned to speak
The age at which the hearing impairment
develops is crucial to spoken language
acquisition. Post-lingual hearing
impairments are far more common than
pre-lingual impairments.
Pre-lingual deafness
Prelingual hearing impairment exists
when the impairment is congenital or
otherwise acquired before the
individual has acquired speech and
language, thus rendering the
disadvantages more difficult to treat
because the child is unable to access
audible /spoken communication from the
outset. It is important to note that
those children born into signing
families have no delay in language
development and communication. Most
pre-lingual hearing impairment is due
to an acquired condition, usually
either disease or trauma; therefore,
families commonly have no prior
knowledge of deafness.
Post-lingual hearing impairment
Post-lingual hearing impairment where
hearing loss is adventitious after the
acquisition of speech and language,
usually after the age of six. It may
develop 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 the
people so affected long before the
patients themselves will acknowledge
the disability. Common treatments
includes hearing aids and learning lip
reading. Loneliness and depression can
arise as a result of isolation (from
the inability to communicate with
friends and loved ones) and difficulty
in accepting their disability.