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Hearing impairment or
deafness is decreased or absent ability to perceive auditory information. While some cases of hearing loss are reversible with medical treatment, many lead to a permanent disability. Of vital importance are the age at which the hearing loss occurred, as this may interfere with the acquisition of spoken language. Hearing aids and cochlear implants may alleviate some of the barriers caused by hearing impairment, but are often insufficient. Persons with difficulty hearing, especially those who develop a hearing problem later in life, often require social acceptance and support, as well as technical adaptations, as part of the rehabilitation process.
Causes
There are four major causes of hearing loss: genetic, disease processes affecting the ear, medication and physical trauma.
Genetic
Hearing impairment can be inherited. Both dominant and recessive genes exist which can cause mild to profound impairment. If a family has a dominant gene for deafness it will persist across generations because it will be expressed in the offspring even if it is inherited from only one parent. If a family had genetic hearing impairment caused by a recessive gene it will not always manifest as it will have to be passed onto offspring from both parents.
Disease or illness
Measles may result in auditory nerve damage
Meningitis may damage the auditory nerve or the cochlea
Autoimmune disease has only recently been recognised as a potential cause for cochlear damage. Although probably rare, it is possible for autoimmune processes to target the cochlea specifically, without symptoms affecting other organs. Wegener's granulomatosis is one of the autoimmune conditions that may precipiate hearing loss.
Presbyacusis is deafness due to loss of perception to high tones, mainly in the elderly. It is considered a degenerative process, and it is poorly understood why some elderly people develop presbyacusis while others do not.
Medications
Some medications cause irreversible damage to the ear, and are limited in their use for this reason. The most important group is the aminoglycosides (main member gentamycin).
Various other medications may reversibly affect hearing. This includes some diuretics, aspirin and NSAIDs, and macrolide antibiotics.
Physical trauma
There can be damage either to the ear itself or to the brain centers that process the aural information conveyed by the ears.
People who sustain head injury are especially vulnerable to hearing loss or tinnitus, either temporary or permanent.
Exposure to very loud noise (90 dB or more, such as jet engines at close range) can cause progressive hearing loss. Exposure to a single event of extremely loud noise (such as explosions) can also cause temporary or permanent hearing loss.
Categories of hearing impairment
Pre- or postlingual
The age at which the hearing impairment develops is crucial to spoken language acquisition. Post-lingual hearing impairments are far more common than pre-lingual impairments.
Pre-lingual deafness
Pre-lingual hearing impairment exists when the impairment is congenital or otherwise acquired before the individual has acquired speech and language, thus rendering the disadvantages more difficult to treat because the child is unable to communicate from the outset. Most pre-lingual hearing impairment is due to an acquired condition, usually either disease or trauma.
Post-lingual hearing impairment
Post-lingual hearing impairment where hearing loss is adventitious after the acquisition of speech and language, usually after the age of six. It may develop due to disease, trauma, or as a side-effect of a medicine. Typically, hearing loss is gradual, and often detected by family and friends of the people so affected long before the patients themselves will acknowledge the disability. Common treatments includes hearing aids and learning lip reading. 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.
Partial loss of hearing
People who are hard-of-hearing have moderate amounts of hearing loss but not enough to be considered deaf.
The phrase hard-of-hearing, normally used as an adjective or adverb, can also be used as a noun, referring to people with hearing impairment as the hard-of-hearing.
Hearing impaired persons with partial loss of hearing may find that the quality of their hearing varies from day to day, or from one situation to another or not at all. They may also, to a greater or lesser extent, depend on both hearing-aids and lip-reading. They may perhaps not always be aware of it, but they do admit to it being important to see the speaker's face in conversation.
Many people with hearing loss have better hearing in the lower frequency ranges (low tones), and cannot hear as well or at all in the higher frequencies. The condition may be worsened by a number of factors that affect how they can use a hearing aid or lip reading skills, or perception of sound.
Unilateral hearing loss
People with unilateral hearing loss can hear normally in one ear, but have trouble hearing out of the other ear.
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.
How to communicate
Some guidelines on communicating with a hearing-impaired person:
Ask the person what will be most useful for them; this varies from one individual to another. Not all items on this list will apply for all individuals. Most likely, the person will be grateful that you are communicating with their needs in mind and not stereotyping them according to common views of hearing impairment.
If the person uses sign language to communicate, take a class in sign language (possibly with the individual or along with family and friends). Show your support by striving to master the language.
Speak normally. Do not shout or over-enunciate. Both of these make it more difficult to understand speech, not less.
Conversely, do not mumble, cover your mouth, or whisper when speaking. All of these can conceal vital speech-reading cues that hearing impaired people use to decipher what is being said. A "favorite" pet peeve of the hearing impaired is people who speak from another room - How are they to speech-read with a wall between them and the speaker? Additionally, speak while facing the hearing impaired person.
If asked to repeat yourself, don't. It is often more beneficial to rephrase instead. By using different words, your friend will be able to use two data sets to understand what you meant. (This is good advice for those with normal hearing, too!) Obviously, if only one word was missed, you can try just repeating that word, or a synonym. However, some hearing-impaired people would prefer that you repeat exactly instead of rephrasing; when a sentence is repeated, they can put together the syllables or words they heard the first time with those in the repetition. It is best to use the technique that the hearing-impaired person most prefers.
Emphasize keywords in your phrases. Most hearing-impaired people can piece together keywords (along with the context of the conversation) into a statement that they can understand.
Reduce background noise by turning off the TV and radio, and closing windows. All of these can provide distractions that cause communication to break down completely. They also impede the perception of whatever auditory cues your friend is able to pick up and use.
For small children learning to talk, use context to help them decipher what you are saying. (Additionally, some studies indicate that hearing impaired children who are allowed to lead conversation acquire speech much more successfully than those whose parents attempt to guide conversation for them.)
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This article is licensed under the GNU Free Documentation License.
It uses material from the Wikipedia article "Hearing_impairment"
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