Approaches and adaptions to hearing
impairment
Approaches
In addition to hearing aids there exist
cochlear implants of increasing
complexity and effectiveness. These are
useful in treating the mild to profound
hearing impairment when the onset
follows the acquisitions of language
and in some cases in children whose
hearing loss came before language was
acquired. Recent research shows
variations in effacacy but some
promising studies show that if
implanted at a very young age, some
profoundly impaired children can
acquire effective hearing and
speech.
Views of treatments
There is controversy in the culturally
deaf community as to whether cochlear
implants address wellness concerns, the
overall health and psycho-emotional
well-being of prelingually deaf
children at all.
Adaptations to hearing
impairment
Many hearing impaired individuals use
certain assistive devices in their
daily lives. Individuals can
communicate by telephone using
telecommunications devices for the deaf
(TDD) This device looks like a
typewriter or word processor and
transmits typed text over the
telephone. Other names in common use
are textphone and minicom. In 2004,
mobile textphone devices came onto the
market for the first time allowing
simultaneous two way text
communication. In the U.S., the UK, the
Netherlands and many other western
countries there are telephone relay
services so that a hearing impaired
person can communicate with a hearing
person via a human translator.
Wireless, internet and mobile phone/SMS
text messaging are beginning to take
over the role of the TDD. Other
assistive devices include those that
use flashing lights to signal events
such as a ringing telephone, a
doorbell, or a fire alarm. Video
conferencing is also a new technology
that permits signed conversations as
well as permitting an ASL-English
interpreter to voice and sign
conversations between a hearing
impaired and hearing person, negating
the need to use a TTY or computer
keyboard.
Resources
There are many different assistive
technologies such as hearing aids
available to people who are hearing
impaired. There are also Hearing dogs
which are a category of Assistance
dogs. The advent of the internet's
World Wide Web and closed captioning
has given the hearing impaired
unprecedented access to information.
Electronic mail and online chat have
virtually eliminated the need for
hearing impaired people to use a
third-party Telecommunications Relay
Service in order to communicate with
the hearing and other hearing impaired
people.