| Cultural
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In
our culture, hearing loss has been viewed as something of a stigma.
Part of the reason few people with hearing loss get help is that we
simply don’t talk about it. It’s a sign of advancing age.
Yet, like impaired vision, it is one of the most common health problems throughout the world.
Unlike impaired vision, hearing loss is often made fun of. People
with hearing loss have to deal with the perception that their intelligence
or grasp on reality is unsound, simply because they don’t hear
something correctly.
The analogy to impaired vision is important, because hearing loss
is such a similar phenomenon. The way both hearing loss and vision
impairment are diagnosed (by a doctor or a technician), treated (with
hardware that compensates for the loss) and dispensed (by trained
clinicians, typically outside the “medical” sphere) is
strikingly similar.
Yet eyeglasses are free of stigma—indeed, they’re a fashion
statement—while hearing aids continue to be seen as undesirable.
One reason is that people understand the physiology behind poor eyesight
more clearly than that of poor hearing. Another reason is that eyeglasses
have been around a lot longer. But it’s only a matter of time
before hearing aids catch up.
That shift is now taking place, as an ever-younger group of people
experience hearing loss and seek treatment. These changing demographics
are helping to bring a very mainstream complaint into the popular
dialog.
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