hearing loss can lead to social
isolation
Social impact
Pre-lingual Impairment
In children, hearing loss can lead to
social isolation for several reasons.
First, the child experiences delayed
social development that is in large
part tied to delayed language
acquisition. It is also directly tied
to their inability to pick up auditory
social cues. This can result in a deaf
person becoming generally irritable. A
child who uses sign language, or
identifies with the deaf sub-culture
does not generally experience this
isolation, particularly if he attends a
school for the deaf, but may conversely
experience isolation from his parents
if they do not know sign language. A
child who is exclusively or
predominantly oral (using speech for
communication) can experience social
isolation from his or her hearing
peers, particularly if no one takes the
time to explicitly teach her social
skills that other children acquire
independently by virtue of having
normal hearing. Finally, a child who
has a severe impairment and uses some
sign language may be rejected by his or
her deaf peers, because of an
understandable hesitation in abandoning
the use of existent verbal and
speech-reading skills. Some in the deaf
community can view this as a rejection
of their own culture and its mores, and
therefore will reject the individual
preemptively.
Post-Lingual Impairment
Those who lose their hearing later in
life, such as in late adolescence or
adulthood, face their own challenges.
For example, they must adjust to living
with the adaptations that make it
possible for them to live
independently. They may have to adapt
to using hearing aids or a cochlear
implant, develop speech-reading skills,
and/or learn sign language. The
affected person may need to use a TTY
(teletype), interpreter, or relay
service to communicate over the
telephone. 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. The
challenge is made greater by the need
for those around them to adapt to the
person's hearing loss. Many
relationships have suffered because of
the anger that occurs when there is
general miscommunication between family
members. Generally, it's not only the
person with a hearing disability that
feels isolated, but others around them
who feel they are not being "heard" or
paid attention to, especially when the
hearing loss has been gradual. Many
people opt not to choose hearing aids
for fear of looking old, since hearing
loss is usually associated with old age
and that in turn equals ineffectiveness
in our society. Family members then
feel as if their hearing loss partner
doesn't care about them enough to make
changes to reduce their disability and
make it easier to communicate.