The severity of hearing loss is
measured by the degree of loudness, as
measured in decibels, a sound must
attain before being detected by an
individual. Hearing loss may be ranked
as mild, moderate, severe or profound.
It is quite common for someone to have
more than one degree of hearing loss
(i.e. mild sloping to severe). The
following list shows the rankings and
their corresponding decibel ranges:
- Mild for
adults: between 25 and 40 dB
- Mild for
children: between 15 and 40 dB
- Moderate:
between 41 and 55 dB
- Moderately
severe: between 56 and 70 dB
- Severe:
between 71 and 90 dB
- Profound: 90 dB or greater
The quietest sound you can hear at
different frequencies is plotted on an
audiogram to reflect your ability to
hear at different frequencies. The
range of normal human hearing (from the
softest audible sound to the loudest
comfortable sound) is so great, that
the audiogram must be plotted using a
logarithmic scale. This, and the
different amount of hearing loss at
different frequencies, make it
virtually impossible to accurately
describe the amount of hearing loss in
simple terms such as percentages or the
rankings, above.