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julianlamyesterday at 5:00 AM2 repliesview on HN

Thank you so much for commenting.

As a parent with a child with mild-to-moderate hearing loss it is heartening to know that the hearing aid technology is progressing, and progressing well!

He's been using a pair of Phonak Skys since infancy, and while they can be tuned by the audiologist I sometimes wonder what it'll be like if and when he gets his next pair.


Replies

mrjyesterday at 2:09 PM

My son is 14 and has a moderate to severe loss. During his younger years we had a big clunky behind the ear type of aid and it was fine for a while. But tech progressed and we started noticing that he was having trouble hearing "s" sounds. I researched and got him the Oticon Real and it's been amazing and his speech dramatically improved with the new tech. There have been a lot fewer problems with wind noise and he can talk and pay attention in loud environments like school or a restaurant. His grades shot up.

The newer tech is definitely worth it but spendy. There are times though when I'm a bit jealous, too! He can turn them off when he doesn't want to hear and can listen to anything on his phone over bluetooth, as well as take calls. And he never wakes up at night because of noise :)

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BobaFloutistyesterday at 8:23 PM

You probably already know this, but if not, I urge you to learn sign language as a family! Hearing aids will always be helpful for when he's out and about in society with people who don't know sign language, but it's a much more reliable, concrete, comfortable way to communicate with people with hearing loss than hearing aids, and it both had extra benefits for people with full hearing and people without.