About Otolaryngology

Allergies

Balance

Ears

Facial Plastic Surgery

Head and Neck Surgery

Hearing

  Infant Hearing

  Your Child's Hearing Loss

    Introduction

    Early Detection

    Early Intervention

    Hearing Aids

    Hearing Aid Circuitry

    Implants

    Programs

    Options

    Age Three

    School

    Techniques / Technology

    Regular Classrooms

    At Home

    Having Fun

    As Your Child Grows

    References / Resources

    Author Credits

  Noise & Hearing Protection

  Tinnitus (Ringing)

  Buying a Hearing Aid

  Hearing Aids Over Time

  Hearing Health Links

  Interactive Loudness Scale

  Facts About Otosclerosis

  Your Genes and Hearing Loss

Nose

Sinuses

Snoring and Sleep Disorders

Throat, Voice, Swallowing

Thyroid / Parathyroid

Tobacco and Cancer

En Español

General Topics

Kids E.N.T. Health

So Your Child has a Hearing Loss: Next Steps for Parents

Types of Hearing Aid Circuitry

Two main types of electronics are used in hearing aids:

  1. Analog/Conventional - Your audiologist determines the volume and other specifications your child requires in a hearing aid and a laboratory builds an aid to meet these needs. This is generally the least expensive type of circuitry.

  2. Analog/Programmable - Your audiologist uses a computer to program your child's hearing aid. This circuitry can accommodate more than one program so that your child can change the program to receive better sound across different listening conditions.

  3. Digital/Programmable - Your audiologist uses a computer to program your child's hearing aid and can adjust the sound quality and response time on an individual basis. Digital hearing aids use a computer chip and, as a result, offer the most flexibility to your audiologist in making adjustments. Digital hearing aids also offer a number of settings that allow the user to manipulate the amplification of incoming sound in specific frequencies where it's difficult to hear. Digital circuitry is the most expensive of the above options.

Most of the time, two hearing aids are recommended for your child. Research studies on adults have shown that those people who have a hearing loss in both ears, but habitually wear only one aid, lose the ability to recognize speech in the other ear. This phenomenon is known as "auditory deprivation." Once the ability to recognize speech has been lost, it cannot be restored. If your child has a hearing loss in both ears, using two hearing aids prevents auditory deprivation and helps your child to localize sound and to hear better even in noise.

Hearing aids are expensive, so you will want to understand exactly your audiologist's terms of purchase. You will also want to know whether your audiologist has a variety of hearing aids for your child to try. Some good questions to ask your audiologist are found in the sidebar. While a few insurance companies include coverage of hearing aids, most exclude them. Check your policy before purchase. Some families have been successful in urging their employers, or lobbying insurance companies directly, to offer such coverage.

What can you do if you cannot afford hearing aids? Under the federal law supporting special education (entitled the Individuals with Disabilities Education Act, or IDEA) if your child is already enrolled in a public school education program. You will find further information about IDEA and special education later in this document.


© 2002 by Alexander Graham Bell Association for the Deaf and Hard of Hearing

 

  Home  

  Contact Us  

  Privacy  

  Links  

  Disclaimer