Awareness

From a $3.95 Guitar to the Solid Body Electric Guitar: How Les Paul’s Persistence Changed the World of Music

Music legend Les Paul is famous for inventing the solid body electric guitar and other innovations related to recording music. Less known is that he also had a hearing loss and wore hearing aids in both ears.

Print Friendly and PDF

BLOG ARCHIVE

What Works for Me: Revelations From Seeking Help for Chronic Tinnitus

The hearing loss and tinnitus that resulted from my service have stayed with me, making me part of the two million Americans with debilitating tinnitus, and the 20 million with chronic tinnitus. Seeking help, I turned myself into a human guinea pig. Here’s what I learned.

Print Friendly and PDF

BLOG ARCHIVE

Why Are (Some) Sports So Noisy?

My friends and I were at a college basketball game, hollering and stomping on the bleachers. The shouting and pounding merged us into a single, vibrating, noise envelope of our own making, and we loved every decibel of it. That was long before I paid much attention to noise, or started losing my hearing.

Print Friendly and PDF

BLOG ARCHIVE

The USPSTF Sticks to Its Recommendation: No Hearing Screenings for Older Adults

As in its draft recommendation released a few months earlier (which I wrote about), the USPSTF “concludes that the current evidence is insufficient to assess the balance of benefits and harms of screening for hearing in older adults.”

Print Friendly and PDF

BLOG ARCHIVE

How Far We've Come: Opportunities for Children With Hearing Loss Then and Now

Pioneering educators in the 1970s and 1980s created a new vision for infants and toddlers with hearing loss, emphasizing early identification and family training—revolutionary ideas then, best practices now.

Print Friendly and PDF

BLOG ARCHIVE

From Macrame to Masks

This adjustable elastic was designed for those with special needs, such as those with autism and wearers of hearing aids. The principal is simple: One strap goes around the neck, the other one around the head. The problem was the bottom elastic—it gets caught in the hearing aids and the elastic turns into a slingshot.

Print Friendly and PDF

BLOG ARCHIVE

The Things I Miss

I formally learned of my mild to moderately-severe bilateral sensorineural hearing loss at age 49. The ear, nose, and throat (ENT) doctor’s verdict was unexpected. Almost 13 years later, I wear hearing aids vigilantly, but there’s still so much that I miss about having typical hearing.

Print Friendly and PDF

BLOG ARCHIVE

COVID-19 and Hearing Loss, Tinnitus, and Vertigo

Over the past year of the COVID-19 pandemic, case reports and studies have suggested a link between the SARS-CoV-2 virus that causes COVID-19 and hearing loss and related conditions.

Print Friendly and PDF

BLOG ARCHIVE

Finding a “New Normal” After Sudden Single-Sided Deafness

Michael Goldsmith realized he had lost his hearing in his left ear when he woke up from his medically induced coma in March 2020. His account demonstrates the learning process and journey to a cochlear implant when sudden deafness occurs as just one part of a more complex medical situation.

Print Friendly and PDF

BLOG ARCHIVE

Doing My Part to Break Sound Barriers

In September 2020, I conducted my own fundraiser for Hearing Health Foundation (HHF) online. I don’t live with a hearing and balance condition and do not have any family members affected. Rather, I became inspired to help after a very memorable elementary school experience.

Print Friendly and PDF

BLOG ARCHIVE