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Wikipedia

Hearing aid

A hearing aid is a device designed to improve hearing by making sound audible to a person with hearing loss. Hearing aids are classified as medical devices in most countries, and regulated by the respective regulations. Small audio amplifiers such as personal sound amplification products (PSAPs) or other plain sound reinforcing systems cannot be sold as "hearing aids".

Hearing aid
In-the-canal hearing aid
Other namesDeaf aid
[edit on Wikidata]

Early devices, such as ear trumpets or ear horns,[1][2] were passive amplification cones designed to gather sound energy and direct it into the ear canal. Modern devices are computerised electroacoustic systems that transform environmental sound to make it audible, according to audiometrical and cognitive rules. Modern devices also utilize sophisticated digital signal processing to try and improve speech intelligibility and comfort for the user. Such signal processing includes feedback management, wide dynamic range compression, directionality, frequency lowering, and noise reduction.

Modern hearing aids require configuration to match the hearing loss, physical features, and lifestyle of the wearer. The hearing aid is fitted to the most recent audiogram and is programmed by frequency. This process called "fitting" can be performed by the user in simple cases, by a Doctor of Audiology, also called an audiologist (AuD), or by a Hearing Instrument Specialist (HIS) or audioprosthologist. The amount of benefit a hearing aid delivers depends in large part on the quality of its fitting. Almost all hearing aids in use in the US are digital hearing aids, as analog aids are phased out.[3] Devices similar to hearing aids include the osseointegrated auditory prosthesis (formerly called the bone-anchored hearing aid) and cochlear implant.

Uses edit

Hearing aids are used for a variety of pathologies including sensorineural hearing loss, conductive hearing loss, and single-sided deafness. Hearing aid candidacy was traditionally determined by a Doctor of Audiology, or a certified hearing specialist, who will also fit the device based on the nature and degree of the hearing loss being treated. The amount of benefit experienced by the user of the hearing aid is multi-factorial, depending on the type, severity, and etiology of the hearing loss, the technology and fitting of the device, and on the motivation, personality, lifestyle, and overall health of the user.[4] Over-the-counter hearing aids, which address mild- to moderate- hearing loss, are designed to be adjusted by the user.[5]

Hearing aids are incapable of truly correcting a hearing loss; they are an aid to make sounds more audible. The most common form of hearing loss for which hearing aids are sought is sensorineural, resulting from damage to the hair cells and synapses of the cochlea and auditory nerve. Sensorineural hearing loss reduces the sensitivity to sound, which a hearing aid can partially accommodate by making sound louder. Other decrements in auditory perception caused by sensorineural hearing loss, such as abnormal spectral and temporal processing, and which may negatively affect speech perception, are more difficult to compensate for using digital signal processing and in some cases may be exacerbated by the use of amplification.[6][page needed] Conductive hearing losses, which do not involve damage to the cochlea, tend to be better treated by hearing aids; the hearing aid is able to sufficiently amplify sound to account for the attenuation caused by the conductive component. Once the sound is able to reach the cochlea at normal or near-normal levels, the cochlea and auditory nerve are able to transmit signals to the brain normally.

Common issues with hearing aid fitting and use are the occlusion effect, loudness recruitment, and understanding speech in noise. Once a common problem, feedback is generally now well-controlled through the use of feedback management algorithms.

Candidacy and acquisition edit

There are several ways of evaluating how well a hearing aid compensates for hearing loss. One approach is audiometry which measures a subject's hearing levels in laboratory conditions. The threshold of audibility for various sounds and intensities is measured in a variety of conditions. Although audiometric tests may attempt to mimic real-world conditions, the patient's own every day experiences may differ. An alternative approach is self-report assessment, where the patient reports their experience with the hearing aid.[7][8]

Hearing aid outcome can be represented by three dimensions:[9]

  1. hearing aid usage
  2. aided speech recognition
  3. benefit/satisfaction

The most reliable method for assessing the correct adjustment of a hearing aid is through real ear measurement.[10] Real ear measurements (or probe microphone measurements) are an assessment of the characteristics of hearing aid amplification near the ear drum using a silicone probe tube microphone.[11]

Current research is also pointing towards hearing aids and proper amplification as a treatment for tinnitus, a medical condition which manifests itself as a ringing or buzzing in the ears.[12]

Types edit

There are many types of hearing aids (also known as hearing instruments), which vary in size, power and circuitry. Among the different sizes and models are:

Body-worn edit

Body worn aids were the first portable electronic hearing aids, and were invented by Harvey Fletcher while working at Bell Laboratories.[13] Body aids consist of a case and an earmold, attached by a wire. The case contains the electronic amplifier components, controls and battery, while the earmold typically contains a miniature loudspeaker. The case is typically about the size of a pack of playing cards and is carried in a pocket or on a belt.[14] Without the size constraints of smaller hearing devices, body worn aid designs can provide large amplification and long battery life at a lower cost. Body aids are still used in emerging markets because of their relatively low cost.[14]

Behind the ear edit

 
A modern behind the ear hearing aid. The audio tube to the speaker is barely visible.
 
A modern behind the ear hearing aid with a minicell battery

Behind the ear hearing aids are one of two major classes of hearing aids – behind the ear (BTE) and in the ear (ITE). These two classes are distinguished by where the hearing aid is worn. BTE hearing aids consist of a case which hangs behind the pinna. The case is attached to an earmold or dome tip by a traditional tube, slim tube, or wire. The tube or wire courses from the superior-ventral portion of the pinna to the concha, where the ear mold or dome tip inserts into the external auditory canal. The case contains the electronics, controls, battery, and microphone(s).The loudspeaker, or receiver, may be housed in the case (traditional BTE) or in the earmold or dome tip (receiver-in-the-canal, or RIC). The RIC style of BTE hearing aid is often smaller than a traditional BTE and more commonly used in more active populations.[15]

BTEs are generally capable of providing more output and may therefore be indicated for more severe degrees of hearing loss. However, BTEs are very versatile and can be used for nearly any kind of hearing loss. BTEs come in a variety of sizes, ranging from a small, "mini BTE", to larger, ultra-power devices. Size typically depends on the output level needed, the location of the receiver, and the presence or absence of a telecoil. BTEs are durable, easy to repair, and often have controls and battery doors that are easier to manipulate. BTEs are also easily connected to assistive listening devices, such as FM systems and induction loops. BTEs are commonly worn by children who need a durable type of hearing aid.[14]

In the ear edit

In the ear aids (ITE) devices fit in the outer ear bowl (called the concha). Being larger, these are easier to insert and can hold extra features.[16] They are sometimes visible when standing face to face with someone. ITE hearing aids are custom made to fit each individual's ear. They can be used in mild to some severe hearing losses. Feedback, a squealing/whistling caused by sound (particularly high frequency sound) leaking and being amplified again, may be a problem for severe hearing losses.[17] Some modern circuits are able to provide feedback regulation or cancellation to assist with this. Venting may also cause feedback. A vent is a tube primarily placed to offer pressure equalization. However, different vent styles and sizes can be used to influence and prevent feedback.[18] Traditionally, ITEs have not been recommended for young children because their fit could not be as easily modified as the earmold for a BTE, and thus the aid had to be replaced frequently as the child grew.[19] However, there are new ITEs made from a silicone type material that mitigates the need for costly replacements. ITE hearing aids can be connected wirelessly to FM systems, for instance with a body-worn FM receiver with induction neck-loop which transmits the audio signal from the FM transmitter inductively to the telecoil inside the hearing instrument.

Mini in canal (MIC) or completely in canal (CIC) aids are generally not visible unless the viewer looks directly into the wearer's ear.[20][21] These aids are intended for mild to moderately severe losses. CICs are usually not recommended for people with good low-frequency hearing, as the occlusion effect is much more noticeable.[22] Completely-in-the-canal hearing aids fit tightly deep in the ear.[16] It is barely visible.[16] Being small, it will not have a directional microphone, and its small batteries will have a short life, and the batteries and controls may be difficult to manage.[16] Its position in the ear prevents wind noise and makes it easier to use phones without feedback.[16] In-the-canal hearing aids are placed deep in the ear canal.[16] They are barely visible.[16] Larger versions of these can have directional microphones.[16] Being in the canal, they are less likely to cause a plugged feeling.[16] These models are easier to manipulate than the smaller completely in-the-canal models but still have the drawbacks of being rather small.[16]

In-the-ear hearing aids are typically more expensive than behind-the-ear counterparts of equal functionality, because they are custom fitted to the patient's ear. In fitting, the audiologist takes a physical impression (mold) of the ear. The mold is scanned by a specialized CAD system, resulting in a 3D model of the outer ear. During modeling, the venting tube is inserted. The digitally modeled shell is printed using a rapid prototyping technique such as stereolithography. Finally, the aid is assembled and shipped to the audiologist after a quality check.[23]

Invisible-in-canal hearing aids edit

Invisible-in-canal hearing aids (IIC) style of hearing aids fits inside the ear canal completely, leaving little to no trace of an installed hearing aid visible. This is because it fits deeper in the canal than other types, so that it is out of view even when looking directly into the ear bowl (concha). A comfortable fit is achieved because the shell of the aid is custom-made to the individual ear canal after taking a mold. Invisible hearing aid types use venting and their deep placement in the ear canal to give a more natural experience of hearing. Unlike other hearing aid types, with the IIC aid the majority of the ear is not blocked (occluded) by a large plastic shell. This means that sound can be collected more naturally by the shape of the ear, and can travel down into the ear canal as it would with unassisted hearing. Depending on their size, some models allow the wearer to use a mobile phone as a remote control to alter memory and volume settings, instead of taking the IIC out to do this. IIC types are most suitable for users up to middle age, but are not suitable for elderly people with unsteady hands.[24]

Extended wear hearing aids edit

Extended wear hearing aids are hearing devices that are non-surgically placed in the ear canal by a hearing professional. The extended wear hearing aid represents the first "invisible" hearing device. These devices are worn for 1–3 months at a time without removal. They are made of soft material designed to contour to each user and can be used by people with mild to moderately severe hearing loss. Their close proximity to the ear drum results in improved sound directionality and localization, reduced feedback, and improved high frequency gain.[25] While traditional BTE or ITC hearing aids require daily insertion and removal, extended wear hearing aids are worn continuously and then replaced with a new device. Users can change volume and settings without the aid of a hearing professional. The devices are very useful for active individuals because their design protects against moisture and earwax and can be worn while exercising, showering, etc. Because the device's placement within the ear canal makes them invisible to observers, extended wear hearing aids are popular with those who are self-conscious about the aesthetics of BTE or ITC hearing aid models. As with other hearing devices, compatibility is based on an individual's hearing loss, ear size and shape, medical conditions, and lifestyle. The disadvantages include regular removal and reinsertion of the device when the battery dies, inability to go underwater, earplugs when showering, and for some discomfort with the fit since it is inserted deeply in the ear canal, the only part of the body where skin rests directly on top of bone.

CROS hearing aid edit

A CROS hearing aid is a hearing aid that transmits auditory information from one side of the head to the other side of the head. Candidates include people who have poor word understanding on one side, no hearing on one side, or who are not benefiting from a hearing aid on one side. CROS hearing aids can appear very similar to behind the ear hearing aids. The CROS system can assist the patient in sound localization and understanding auditory information on their poor side. While CROS hearing aids can be quite effective, the long-term solution for those with hearing issues on one side is to use a BiCROS system.[citation needed] This creates more of a balance for wearers.

Bone-anchored edit

A bone anchored hearing aid (BAHA) is a surgically implanted auditory prosthetic based on bone conduction. It is an option for patients without external ear canals, when conventional hearing aids with a mold in the ear cannot be used. The BAHA uses the skull as a pathway for sound to travel to the inner ear. For people with conductive hearing loss, the BAHA bypasses the external auditory canal and middle ear, stimulating the functioning cochlea. For people with unilateral hearing loss, the BAHA uses the skull to conduct the sound from the deaf side to the side with the functioning cochlea.

Individuals under the age of two (five in the USA) typically wear the BAHA device on a Softband. This can be worn from the age of one month as babies tend to tolerate this arrangement very well. When the child's skull bone is sufficiently thick, a titanium "post" can be surgically embedded into the skull with a small abutment exposed outside the skin. The BAHA sound processor sits on this abutment and transmits sound vibrations to the external abutment of the titanium implant. The implant vibrates the skull and inner ear, which stimulate the nerve fibers of the inner ear, allowing hearing.

The surgical procedure is simple both for the surgeon, involving very few risks for the experienced ear surgeon. For the patient, minimal discomfort and pain is reported. Patients may experience numbness of the area around the implant as small superficial nerves in the skin are sectioned during the procedure. This often disappears after some time. There is no risk of further hearing loss due to the surgery. One important feature of the BAHA is that, if a patient for whatever reason does not want to continue with the arrangement, it takes the surgeon less than a minute to remove it. The BAHA does not restrict the wearer from any activities such as outdoor life, sporting activities etc.

A BAHA can be connected to an FM system by attaching a miniaturized FM receiver to it.

Two main brands manufacture BAHAs today – the original inventors Cochlear, and the hearing aid company Oticon.

Eyeglass aids edit

During the late 1950s through 1970s, before in-the-ear aids became common (and in an era when thick-rimmed eyeglasses were popular), people who wore both glasses and hearing aids frequently chose a type of hearing aid that was built into the temple pieces of the spectacles.[26] However, the combination of glasses and hearing aids was inflexible: the range of frame styles was limited, and the user had to wear both hearing aids and glasses at once or wear neither.[27] Today, people who use both glasses and hearing aids can use in-the-ear types, or rest a BTE neatly alongside the arm of the glasses. There are still some specialized situations where hearing aids built into the frame of eyeglasses can be useful, such as when a person has hearing loss mainly in one ear: sound from a microphone on the "bad" side can be sent through the frame to the side with better hearing.

This can also be achieved by using CROS or bi-CROS style hearing aids, which are now wireless in sending sound to the better side.

Spectacle hearing aids edit

These are generally worn by people with a hearing loss who either prefer a more cosmetic appeal of their hearing aids by being attached to their glasses or where sound cannot be passed in the normal way, via a hearing aids, perhaps due to a blockage in the ear canal. pathway or if the client experiences continual infections in the ear. Spectacle aids come in two forms, bone conduction spectacles and air conduction spectacles.

Bone conduction spectacles edit

Sounds are transmitted via a receiver attached from the arm of the spectacles which are fitted firmly behind the boney portion of the skull at the back of the ear, (mastoid process) by means of pressure, applied on the arm of the spectacles. The sound is passed from the receiver on the arm of the spectacles to the inner ear (cochlea), via the bony portion. The process of transmitting the sound through the bone requires a great amount of power. Bone conduction aids generally have a poorer high pitch response and are therefore best used for conductive hearing losses or where it is impractical to fit standard hearing aids.

Air conduction spectacles edit

Unlike the bone conduction spectacles the sound is transmitted via hearing aids which are attached to the arm or arms of the spectacles. When removing your glasses for cleaning, the hearing aids are detached at the same time. Whilst there are genuine instances where spectacle aids are a preferred choice, they may not always be the most practical option.

Directional spectacles edit

These 'hearing glasses' incorporate a directional microphone capability: four microphones on each side of the frame effectively work as two directional microphones, which are able to discern between sound coming from the front and sound coming from the sides or back of the user.[28] This improves the signal-to-noise ratio by allowing for amplification of the sound coming from the front, the direction in which the user is looking, and active noise control for sounds coming from the sides or behind. Only very recently has the technology required become small enough to be fitted in the frame of the glasses. As a recent addition to the market, this new hearing aid is currently available only in the Netherlands and Belgium.[29]

Stethoscope edit

These hearing aids are designed for medical practitioners with hearing loss who use stethoscopes. The hearing aid is built into the speaker of the stethoscope, which amplifies the sound.

Hearing aid applications edit

Hearing aid applications (HAA) are software which, when installed on mobile computational platforms, transforms them into hearing aids.[30]

The principle of HAA operation corresponds to the basic principles of operation of traditional hearing aids: the microphone receives an acoustic signal and converts it into a digital form. Sound amplification is achieved by the means of a mobile computational platform, in accordance with the degree and type of the user's hearing loss. The processed audio signal is transformed into an audio signal and output to the user into the headphones/headset. Signal processing is implemented in real time.

Constructional features of mobile computational platforms imply preferred use of stereo headsets with two speakers, which allows carrying out binaural hearing correction for the left and right ear separately.[31] HAAs can work with both wired and wireless headsets and headphones.[32]

As a rule, HAAs have two operation modes: setup mode and hearing aid mode. Setup mode involves the user passing an in situ-audiometry procedure, which determines the user's hearing characteristics. Hearing aid mode is a hearing correction system that corrects the user's hearing in accordance with the user's hearing thresholds. HAAs also incorporate background noise suppression and acoustic feedback suppression.[31]

The user can independently choose a formula to enhance the sound, as well as adjust the level of the desired amplification to their wishes.[32]

HAAs have several advantages (compared to traditional hearing aids):[citation needed]

  • HAAs do not cause any psychological inconvenience;
  • it is possible to achieve the highest sound pressure level and get high sound quality (due to large speakers and a long battery life);
  • it is possible to use more complex audio signal processing algorithms and a higher sampling rate (because of capacious battery);
  • the possibility to implement more convenient application control functions for people with poor motor skills;
  • resistance to ingress of earwax and moisture;
  • software flexibility;
  • the large distance between the microphone and the speaker prevents the occurrence of acoustic feedback;
  • the set up of HAAs in simple cases does not require special equipment and qualifications;
  • the user does not need to purchase and carry any separate device;
  • various types of headphones and headsets can be used.

HAAs also have some disadvantages (compared to traditional hearing aids):

  • because the microphone is not located in the ear, it does not use the functional advantages of the auricle and the natural acoustics of the outer ear.[31]
  • they are more noticeable and less comfortable to wear.

Technology edit

The first electrical hearing aid used the carbon microphone of the telephone and was introduced in 1896. The vacuum tube made electronic amplification possible, but early versions of amplified hearing aids were too heavy to carry around. Miniaturization of vacuum tubes lead to portable models, and after World War II, wearable models using miniature tubes. The transistor invented in 1948 was well suited to the hearing aid application due to low power and small size; hearing aids were an early adopter of transistors. The development of integrated circuits allowed further improvement of the capabilities of wearable aids, including implementation of digital signal processing techniques and programmability for the individual user's needs.

Compatibility with telephones edit

 
A sign in a train station explains that the public announcement system uses a "Hearing Induction Loop" (audio induction loop). Hearing aid users can use a telecoil (T) switch to hear announcements directly through their hearing aid receiver.

A hearing aid and a telephone are "compatible" when they can connect to each other in a way that produces clear, easily understood sound. The term "compatibility" is applied to all three types of telephones (wired, cordless, and mobile). There are two ways telephones and hearing aids can connect with each other:

  • Acoustically: the sound from the phone's speaker is picked up by the hearing aid's microphone.
  • Electromagnetically: the signal inside the phone's speaker is picked up by the hearing aid's "telecoil" or "T-coil", a special loop of wire inside the hearing aid.

Note that telecoil coupling has nothing to do with the radio signal in a cellular or cordless phone: the audio signal picked up by the telecoil is the weak electromagnetic field that is generated by the voice coil in the phone's speaker as it pushes the speaker cone back and forth.

The electromagnetic (telecoil) mode is usually more effective than the acoustic method. This is mainly because the microphone is often automatically switched off when the hearing aid is operating in telecoil mode, so background noise is not amplified. Since there is an electronic connection to the phone, the sound is clearer and distortion is less likely. But in order for this to work, the phone has to be hearing-aid compatible. More technically, the phone's speaker has to have a voice coil that generates a relatively strong electromagnetic field. Speakers with strong voice coils are more expensive and require more energy than the tiny ones used in many modern telephones; phones with the small low-power speakers cannot couple electromagnetically with the telecoil in the hearing aid, so the hearing aid must then switch to acoustic mode. Also, many mobile phones emit high levels of electromagnetic noise that creates audible static in the hearing aid when the telecoil is used. A workaround that resolves this issue on many mobile phones is to plug a wired (not Bluetooth) headset into the mobile phone; with the headset placed near the hearing aid the phone can be held far enough away to attenuate the static. Another method is to use a "neckloop" (which is like a portable, around-the-neck induction loop), and plug the neckloop directly into the standard audio jack (headphones jack) of a smartphone (or laptop, or stereo, etc.). Then, with the hearing aids' telecoil turned on (usually a button to press), the sound will travel directly from the phone, through the neckloop and into the hearing aids' telecoils.[33]

On 21 March 2007, the Telecommunications Industry Association issued the TIA-1083 standard,[34] which gives manufacturers of cordless telephones the ability to test their products for compatibility with most hearing aids that have a T-Coil magnetic coupling mode. With this testing, digital cordless phone manufacturers will be able to inform consumers about which products will work with their hearing aids.[35]

The American National Standards Institute (ANSI) has a ratings scale for compatibility between hearing aids and phones:

  • When operating in acoustic (Microphone) mode, the ratings are from M1 (worst) to M4 (best).
  • When operating in electromagnetic (Telecoil) mode, the ratings are from T1 (worst) to T4 (best).

The best possible rating is M4/T4 meaning that the phone works well in both modes. Devices rated below M3 are unsatisfactory for people with hearing aids.

Computer programs that allow the creation of a hearing aid using a PC, tablet or smartphone are currently gaining in popularity.[36] Modern mobile devices have all the necessary components to implement this: hardware (an ordinary microphone and headphones may be used) and a high-performance microprocessor that carries digital sound processing according to a given algorithm. Application configuration is carried out by the user themselves in accordance with the individual features of their hearing ability. The computational power of modern mobile devices is sufficient to produce the best sound quality. This, coupled with software application settings (for example, profile selection according to a sound environment) provides for high comfort and convenience of use. In comparison with the digital hearing aid, mobile applications have the following advantages:

  • acoustic gain is up to 30 dB (with a standard headset);
  • complete invisibility (smartphone is not associated with a hearing aid);
  • ease of use (no need to use additional devices, batteries and so on.);
  • Fast switching between the external headset and phone microphone;
  • free distribution of applications.
  • High duration of the battery;
  • high sampling frequency (44.1 kHz) providing for excellent sound quality;
  • high wearing comfort;
  • low delay in audio processing (from 6,3 to 15,7 ms – depending on the mobile device model);
  • No loss of settings when switching from one gadget to another and back again;
  • No need to get used to it, when changing mobile devices;
  • user-friendly interface of software settings;

It should be clearly understood that "hearing aid" application for smartphone / tablet cannot be considered a complete substitution of a digital hearing aid, since the latter:

  • is a medical device (exposed to the relevant procedures of testing and certification);
  • is adjusted using audiometry procedures.[37]
  • is designed for use by doctor's prescription;

Functionality of hearing aid applications may involve a hearing test (in situ audiometry) too. However, the results of the test are used only to adjust the device for comfortable working with the application. The procedure of hearing testing in any way cannot claim to replace an audiometry test carried out by a medical specialist, so cannot be a basis for diagnosis.

  • Apps such as Oticon ON for certain iOS (Apple) and Android devices can assist in locating a lost/misplaced hearing aid.[38]

Wireless edit

Recent hearing aids include wireless hearing aids. One hearing aid can transmit to the other side so that pressing one aid's program button simultaneously changes the other aid, so that both aids change background settings simultaneously. FM listening systems are now emerging with wireless receivers integrated with the use of hearing aids. A separate wireless microphone can be given to a partner to wear in a restaurant, in the car, during leisure time, in the shopping mall, at lectures, or during religious services. The voice is transmitted wirelessly to the hearing aids eliminating the effects of distance and background noise. FM systems have shown to give the best speech understanding in noise of all available technologies. FM systems can also be hooked up to a TV or a stereo.

2.4 gigahertz Bluetooth connectivity is the most recent innovation in wireless interfacing for hearing instruments to audio sources such as TV streamers or Bluetooth enabled mobile phones. Current hearing aids generally do not stream directly via Bluetooth but rather do so through a secondary streaming device (usually worn around the neck or in a pocket), this bluetooth enabled secondary device then streams wirelessly to the hearing aid but can only do so over a short distance. This technology can be applied to ready-to-wear devices (BTE, Mini BTE, RIE, etc.) or to custom made devices that fit directly into the ear.[39]

In developed countries FM systems are considered a cornerstone in the treatment of hearing loss in children. More and more adults discover the benefits of wireless FM systems as well, especially since transmitters with different microphone settings and Bluetooth for wireless cell phone communication have become available.[40]

Many theatres and lecture halls are now equipped with assistive listening systems that transmit the sound directly from the stage; audience members can borrow suitable receivers and hear the program without background noise. In some theatres and churches FM transmitters are available that work with the personal FM receivers of hearing instruments.

Directional microphone edit

Most older hearing aids have only an omnidirectional microphone. An omnidirectional microphone amplifies sounds equally from all directions. In contrast, a directional microphone amplifies sounds from one direction more than sounds from other directions. This means that sounds originating from the direction the system is steered toward are amplified more than sounds coming from other directions. If the desired speech arrives from the direction of steering and the noise is from a different direction, then compared to an omnidirectional microphone, a directional microphone provides a better signal-to-noise ratio. Improving the signal-to-noise ratio improves speech understanding in noise. Directional microphones have been found to be the second best method to improve the signal-to-noise ratio (the best method was an FM system, which locates the microphone near the mouth of the desired talker).[41]

Many hearing aids have both an omnidirectional and a directional microphone mode.[citation needed] This is because the wearer may not need or desire the noise-reducing properties of the directional microphone in a given situation.[citation needed] Typically, the omnidirectional microphone mode is used in quiet listening situations (e.g. living room) whereas the directional microphone is used in noisy listening situations (e.g. restaurant).[citation needed] The microphone mode is typically selected manually by the wearer.[citation needed] Some hearing aids automatically switch the microphone mode.[citation needed]

Adaptive directional microphones automatically vary the direction of maximum amplification or rejection (to reduce an interfering directional sound source). The direction of amplification or rejection is varied by the hearing aid processor. The processor attempts to provide maximum amplification in the direction of the desired speech signal source or rejection in the direction of the interfering signal source. Unless the user manually temporarily switches to a "restaurant program, forward only mode" adaptive directional microphones frequently amplify the speech of other talkers in a cocktail party type environments, such as restaurants or coffee shops; this can also be helpful during business meetings. The presence of multiple speech signals makes it difficult for the processor to correctly select the desired speech signal. Another disadvantage is that some noises often contain characteristics similar to speech, making it difficult for the hearing aid processor to distinguish the speech from the noise. Despite the disadvantages, adaptive directional microphones can provide improved speech recognition in noise.[42]

FM systems have been found to provide a better signal-to-noise ratio even at larger speaker-to-talker distances in simulated testing conditions.[43]

Telecoil edit

Telecoils or T-coils (from "Telephone Coils") are small devices installed in hearing aids or cochlear implants. An audio induction loop generates an electromagnetic field that can be detected by T-coils, allowing audio sources to be directly connected to a hearing aid. The T-coil is intended to help the wearer filter out background noise. They can be used with telephones, FM systems (with neck loops), and induction loop systems (also called "hearing loops") that transmit sound to hearing aids from public address systems and TVs. In the UK and the Nordic countries, hearing loops are widely used in churches, shops, railway stations, and other public places. In the US, telecoils and hearing loops are gradually becoming more common. Audio induction loops, telecoils and hearing loops are gradually becoming more common also in Slovenia.

A T-coil consists of a metal core (or rod) around which ultra-fine wire is coiled. T-coils are also called induction coils because when the coil is placed in a magnetic field, an alternating electric current is induced in the wire (Ross, 2002b; Ross, 2004). The T-coil detects magnetic energy and transduces (converts) it to electrical energy. In the United States, the Telecommunications Industry Association's TIA-1083 standard, specifies how analog handsets can interact with telecoil devices, to ensure the optimal performance.[44]

Although T-coils are effectively a wide-band receiver, interference is unusual in most hearing loop situations. Interference can manifest as a buzzing sound, which varies in volume depending on the distance the wearer is from the source. Sources are electromagnetic fields, such as CRT computer monitors, older fluorescent lighting, some dimmer switches, many household electrical appliances and airplanes.

The states of Florida and Arizona have passed legislation that requires hearing professionals to inform patients about the usefulness of telecoils.

Legislation affecting use edit

In the United States, the Hearing Aid Compatibility Act of 1988 requires that the Federal Communications Commission (FCC) ensure that all telephones manufactured or imported for use in the United States after August 1989, and all "essential" telephones, be hearing aid-compatible (through the use of a telecoil).[45]

"Essential" phones are defined as "coin-operated telephones, telephones provided for emergency use, and other telephones frequently needed for use by persons using such hearing aids." These might include workplace telephones, telephones in confined settings (like hospitals and nursing homes), and telephones in hotel and motel rooms. Secure telephones, as well as telephones used with public mobile and private radio services, are exempt from the HAC Act. "Secure" phones are defined as "telephones that are approved by the U.S. Government for the transmission of classified or sensitive voice communications."

In 2003, the FCC adopted rules to make digital wireless telephones compatible with hearing aids and cochlear implants. Although analog wireless phones do not usually cause interference with hearing aids or cochlear implants, digital wireless phones often do because of electromagnetic energy emitted by the phone's antenna, backlight, or other components. The FCC has set a timetable for the development and sale of digital wireless telephones that are compatible with hearing aids. This effort promises to increase the number of digital wireless telephones that are hearing aid-compatible. Older generations of both cordless and mobile phones used analog technology.

Audio boot edit

 
A hearing aid with an audio boot

An audio boot or audio shoe is an electronic device used with hearing aids; hearing aids often come with a special set of metal contacts for audio input. Typically the audio boot will fit around the end of the hearing aid (a behind-the-ear model, as in-the-ear do not afford any purchase for the connection) to link it with another device, like an FM system or a cellphone or even a digital audio player.[46]

Direct audio input edit

 
A DAI plug on the end of a cable

Direct audio input (DAI) allows the hearing aid to be directly connected to an external audio source like a CD player or an assistive listening device (ALD). By its very nature, DAI is susceptible to far less electromagnetic interference, and yields a better quality audio signal as opposed to using a T-coil with standard headphones. An audio boot is a type of device that may be used to facilitate DAI.[47]

Processing edit

Every electronic hearing aid has at minimum a microphone, a loudspeaker (commonly called a receiver), a battery, and electronic circuitry. The electronic circuitry varies among devices, even if they are the same style. The circuitry falls into three categories based on the type of audio processing (analog or digital) and the type of control circuitry (adjustable or programmable). Hearing aid devices generally do not contain processors strong enough to process complex signal algorithms for sound source localization.[48]

Analog edit

Analog audio may have:

  • Adjustable control: The audio circuit is analog with electronic components that can be adjusted. The hearing professional determines the gain and other specifications required for the wearer, and then adjusts the analog components either with small controls on the hearing aid itself or by having a laboratory build the hearing aid to meet those specifications. After the adjustment the resulting audio does not change any further, other than overall loudness that the wearer adjusts with a volume control. This type of circuitry is generally the least flexible. The first practical electronic hearing aid with adjustable analog audio circuitry was based on US Patent 2,017,358, "Hearing Aid Apparatus and Amplifier" by Samual Gordon Taylor, filed in 1932.
  • Programmable control: The audio circuit is analog but with additional electronic control circuitry that can be programmed by an audiologist, often with more than one program.[49] The electronic control circuitry can be fixed during manufacturing or in some cases, the hearing professional can use an external computer temporarily connected to the hearing aid to program the additional control circuitry. The wearer can change the program for different listening environments by pressing buttons either on the device itself or on a remote control or in some cases the additional control circuitry operates automatically. This type of circuitry is generally more flexible than simple adjustable controls. The first hearing aid with analog audio circuitry and automatic digital electronic control circuitry was based on US Patent 4,025,721, "Method of and means for adaptively filtering near-stationary noise from speech" by D Graupe, GD Causey, filed in 1975. This digital electronic control circuitry was used to identify and automatically reduce noise in individual frequency channels of the analog audio circuits and was known as the Zeta Noise Blocker.

Digital edit

 
Block diagram of digital hearing aid

Digital audio, programmable control: Both the audio circuit and the additional control circuits are fully digital. The hearing professional programs the hearing aid with an external computer temporarily connected to the device and can adjust all processing characteristics on an individual basis. Fully digital circuitry allows implementation of many additional features not possible with analog circuitry, can be used in all styles of hearing aids and is the most flexible; for example, digital hearing aids can be programmed to amplify certain frequencies more than others, and can provide better sound quality than analog hearing aids. Fully digital hearing aids can be programmed with multiple programs that can be invoked by the wearer, or that operate automatically and adaptively. These programs reduce acoustic feedback (whistling), reduce background noise, detect and automatically accommodate different listening environments (loud vs. soft, speech vs. music, quiet vs. noisy, etc.), control additional components such as multiple microphones to improve spatial hearing, transpose frequencies (shift high frequencies that a wearer may not hear to lower frequency regions where hearing may be better), and implement many other features. Fully digital circuitry also allows control over wireless transmission capability for both the audio and the control circuitry. Control signals in a hearing aid on one ear can be sent wirelessly to the control circuitry in the hearing aid on the opposite ear to ensure that the audio in both ears is either matched directly or that the audio contains intentional differences that mimic the differences in normal binaural hearing to preserve spatial hearing ability. Audio signals can be sent wirelessly to and from external devices through a separate module, often a small device worn like a pendant and commonly called a "streamer", that allows wireless connection to yet other external devices. This capability allows optimal use of mobile telephones, personal music players, remote microphones and other devices. With the addition of speech recognition and internet capability in the mobile phone, the wearer has optimal communication ability in many more situations than with hearing aids alone. This growing list includes voice activated dialing, voice activated software applications either on the phone or on the internet, receipt of audio signals from databases on the phone or on internet, or audio signals from television sets or from global positioning systems. The first practical, wearable, fully digital hearing aid was invented by Maynard Engebretson, Robert E Morley Jr. and Gerald R Popelka.[50] Their work resulted in US Patent 4,548,082, "Hearing aids, signal supplying apparatus, systems for compensating hearing deficiencies, and methods" by A Maynard Engebretson, Robert E Morley Jr. and Gerald R Popelka, filed in 1984. This patent formed the basis of all subsequent fully digital hearing aids from all manufacturers, including those produced currently.[51]

The signal processing is performed by the microprocessor in real time and taking into account the individual preferences of the user (for example, increasing bass for better speech perception in noisy environments, or selective amplification of high frequencies for people with reduced sensibility to this range). The microprocessor automatically analyzes the nature of the external background noise and adapts the signal processing to the specific conditions (as well as to its change, for example, when the user goes outside from the building).[52]

In speech enhancement, for example using neural networks, finds application in hearing aids. Problems may arise if these methods filter out emergency sounds such as fire alarms and car horns.[53]

Difference between digital and analog hearing aids edit

Analogue hearing aids make all the sounds picked up by the microphone louder. For example, speech and ambient noise will be made louder together. On the other hand, digital hearing aid (DHA) technology processes the sound using digital technology. Before transmitting the sound to the speaker, the DHA microprocessor processes the digital signal received by the microphone according to an algorithm. This allows certain-frequency sounds to be made louder according to the individual user's settings (personal audiogram), and the DHA can automatically adjust to various environments (noisy streets, quiet room, concert hall, etc.).

For users with varying degrees of hearing loss, it is difficult to perceive the entire frequency range of external sounds. DHAs with multi-channel digital processing allow a user to "compose" the output sound by fitting a whole spectrum of the input signal into it. This gives users with limited hearing abilities the opportunity to perceive the whole range of ambient sounds, despite the personal difficulties of perception of certain frequencies. Moreover, even in this "narrow" range the DHA microprocessor is able to emphasize desired sounds (e.g. speech), lowering unwanted loud, high, etc., sounds at the same time.

According to research[54] DHAs have a number of significant advantages compared to analogue hearing aids:

  • "Self-learning" and adaptive adjustment. They can implement adaptive selection of amplification parameters and processing.
  • Effective acoustic feedback reduction. The acoustic whistling common to all hearing aids can be adaptively controlled.
  • Effective use of directional microphones. Directional microphones can be adaptively controlled.
  • Extended frequency range. A larger range of frequencies can be implemented with frequency shifting.
  • Flexibility in selective amplification. They can provide more flexibility in frequency specific amplification to match the individual hearing characteristics of the user.
  • Improved connection to other devices. Connection to other devices such as smartphones and televisions is possible.
  • Noise reduction. They can reduce the background noise level to increase user comfort in noisy environments.
  • Speech recognition. They can distinguish the speech signal from the overall spectrum of sounds, which facilitates speech perception.

These advantages of DHAs were confirmed by a number of studies[55][56][57] relating to the comparative analysis of digital hearing aids of second and first generations and analog hearing aids.

Difference between digital hearing aids and hearing aid applications edit

Smartphones have all the necessary hardware to perform the functions of a digital hearing aid: microphone, AD converter, digital processor, DA converter, amplifier, and speakers. External microphone and speakers can also be connected as a special headset.

The operational principles of hearing aid applications correspond to general operational principles of digital hearing aids: the microphone perceives an acoustic signal and converts it to digital form. Sound amplification is achieved through hardware and software in accordance with the user's hearing characteristics. Then, the signal is converted to analog form and received in the headphones by the user. The signal is processed in real time.

Stereo headsets with two speakers can be used, which allows separate binaural hearing correction for the left and right ear.[31]

Unlike digital hearing aids, the adjustment of hearing aid applications is an integral part of the application itself.[32] Hearing aid applications are adjusted in accordance with the user's audiogram. The whole adjustment process is automated so that the user can perform audiometry on their own.

The hearing correction application has two modes: audiometry and correction. In the audiometry mode, hearing thresholds are measured. In the correction mode, the signal is processed with respect to the obtained thresholds.

Hearing aid applications also provide for different computational formulas for the calculation of sound amplification based on the audiometry data. These formulas are intended for maximum comfortable speech amplification and best sound intelligibility.

Hearing aid applications allow the user to save different user profiles for different acoustic environments. Thus, in contrast to the static settings of digital hearing aids, the user can quickly switch between the profiles depending on the acoustic environment.

One of the most important characteristics of the hearing aid is acoustic feedback. In hearing aid applications, there is a significant hardware delay, so hearing aid applications use a signal processing scheme with the minimum possible algorithmic delay to make it as short as possible.[31]

Difference between PSAP and digital hearing aids edit

Personal sound amplification products (PSAP) are classified by the FDA as "personal sound amplification devices". These compact electronic devices are designed for people without hearing loss. Unlike hearing aids (which the FDA classifies as devices to compensate for hearing impairment),[58] the use of PSAP does not require a medical prescription. Such devices are used by hunters, naturalists (for audio observation of animals or birds), ordinary people (for example, to increase the volume of the TV in a quiet room), etc. PSAP models differ significantly in price and functionality. Some devices simply amplify sound. Others contain directional microphones, equalizers to adjust the audio signal gain and filter noise. In modern days, some people refer to these devices as OTC hearing aids.[59]

Evolution of hearing aid applications edit

There are audio players designed specifically for the hard-of-hearing. These applications amplify the volume of the reproduced audio signal in accordance with the user's hearing characteristics and act as a music volume amplifier and assistive hearing aid. The amplification algorithm works on the frequencies that the user hears worse, thus restoring natural hearing perception of the sound of music.

Just as in hearing aid applications, the player adjustment is based on the user's audiogram.

There are also applications that not only adapt the sound of music but also include some hearing aid functions. Such applications include a sound amplification mode in accordance with the user's hearing characteristics as well as a noise suppression mode and a mode allowing the user to hear ambient sound without pausing the music.

Also, some applications allow the hard-of-hearing to watch video and listen to the radio with comfort. The operational principles of these applications are similar to those of hearing aid applications: the audio signal is amplified on the frequencies that the user hears worse.

Hearing aid adaptation edit

A person using a hearing aid for the first time often cannot make use of all its advantages quickly.[60] The structure and characteristics of hearing aids are thoroughly devised by specialists in order to make the adjustment period as simple and quick as possible. However, despite this, a beginning hearing aid user certainly needs time to get used to it.[61]

The process of adjusting to hearing prostheses consists of the following steps:[60]

  • Initial adjustment of the device
  • Fine adjustments
  • Adaptation to the new sound

Due to the plasticity of the central nervous system, inactive hearing centers in the brain's cortex switch over to processing auditory stimuli in another frequency and intensity. The brain starts to perceive sounds amplified by the hearing aid immediately after the initial adjustment; however, it may not process them correctly right away.[60]

Feeling the hearing aid in the ear may seem unusual. It also takes time to adapt to a new way of hearing. The ear has to be gradually adjusted to the new sound. The sound may seem unnatural, metallic, too loud or too quiet. A whistling sound may also appear, which can be unpleasant.[61]

Hearing aids do not provide immediate improvement. The adjustment period can last from several hours to several months.[60]

Patients are offered an initial schedule to wear their hearing aid, ensuring gradual adaptation to it. If the patient wears the hearing aid continually from the beginning, the unfamiliar sound may cause a headache, and as a result, the user may refuse to wear a hearing aid despite the fact that it helps. Audiologists often run a quick preparation course for the patients. As a rule, users have inflated expectations of hearing aids. They expect that hearing aids will help them to hear in the same way as before hearing loss, but it is not the case. Training sessions help hearing aid users to get accustomed to the feeling of new sounds. Users are strongly recommended to regularly visit an audiologist, including for the purposes of additional hearing aid adjustment.[62]

Hearing aid applications, in contrast to traditional hearing aids, allow the implementation of options such as a built-in adaptation course.

The functions of the course may include:

  • control of the amount of time spent on learning;
  • control over the sequence of exercises;
  • daily reminders to do the exercises.

The goal of the course is to help a user adapt to using a hearing aid application.

The adaptation course includes a certain number of stages, starting from listening to a set of low everyday sounds in a quiet environment, getting accustomed to one's own speech and other people's speech, getting accustomed to speech among background noise, etc.[63]

History edit

 
Madame de Meuron with ear trumpet

The first hearing aids were ear trumpets, and were created in the 17th century. Some of the first hearing aids were external hearing aids. External hearing aids directed sounds in front of the ear and blocked all other noises. The apparatus would fit behind or in the ear.

The movement toward modern hearing aids began with the creation of the telephone, and the first electric hearing aid, the "akouphone", was created about 1895 by Miller Reese Hutchison. By the late 20th century, digital hearing aids were commercially available.[64]

The invention of the carbon microphone, transmitters, digital signal processing chip or DSP, and the development of computer technology helped transform the hearing aid to its present form.[65]

History of digital aids edit

The history of DHA can be divided into three stages. The first stage began in the 1960s with the widespread use of digital computers for simulation of audio processing and for the analysis of systems and algorithms.[66] The work was conducted with the help of the very large digital computers of that era. These efforts were not actual digital hearing aids because the computers were not fast enough for audio processing in real time and their size prevented them from being described as wearable, but they allowed successful studies of the various hardware circuits and algorithms for digital processing of audio signals. The software package Block of Compiled Diagrams (BLODI) developed by Kelly, Lockbaum and Vysotskiy in 1961[67] allowed simulation of any sound system that could be characterized in the form of a block diagram. A special phone was created so that a person with a hearing impairment could listen to the digitally processed signals, but not in real time. In 1967, Harry Levitt used BLODI to simulate a hearing aid on a digital computer.

Almost ten years later the second stage began with the creation of the hybrid hearing aid, in which the analog components of a conventional hearing aid consisting of amplifiers, filters and signal limiting were combined with a separate digital programmable component in a conventional hearing aid case. The audio processing remained analog but it was controlled by the digital programmable component. The digital component could be programmed by connecting the device to an external computer in the laboratory then disconnected to allow the hybrid device to function as a conventional wearable hearing aid.

The hybrid device was effective from a practical point of view because of the low power consumption and compact size. At that time, low-power analog amplifier technology was well developed in contrast to the available semiconductor chips able to process digital audio in real time. The combination of high performance analog components for real time audio processing and a separate low power digital programmable component only for controlling the analog signal led to the creation of several low power digital programmable components able to implement different types of control.

A hybrid hearing aid was developed by Etymotic Design. A little later, Mangold and Lane[66] created a programmable multi-channel hybrid hearing aid. Graupe[68] with co-authors developed a digital programmable component that implemented an adaptive noise filter.

The third stage began in the early 1980s by a research group at Central Institute for the Deaf headed up by faculty members at Washington University in St. Louis MO. This group created the first fully digital wearable hearing aid.[69][70] They first conceived a complete, comprehensive full digital hearing aid, then designed and fabricated, miniaturized full digital computer chips using custom digital signal processing chips with low power and very large scale integrated (VLSI) chip technology able to process both the audio signal in real time and the control signals, yet able to be powered by a battery and be fully wearable as a full digital wearable hearing aid able to be actually used by individuals with hearing loss in real-world environments. Engebretson, Morley and Popelka were the inventors of the first full digital hearing aid. Their work resulted in US Patent 4,548,082, "Hearing aids, signal supplying apparatus, systems for compensating hearing deficiencies, and methods" by A Maynard Engebretson, Robert E Morley Jr. and Gerald R Popelka, filed in 1984 and issued in 1985. This full digital wearable hearing aid also included many additional features now used in all contemporary full digital hearing aids including a bidirectional interface with an external computer, self-calibration, self-adjustment, wide bandwidth, digital programmability, a fitting algorithm based on audibility, internal storage of digital programs, and fully digital multichannel amplitude compression and output limiting. This group created several of these full digital hearing aids and used them for research on hearing impaired people as they wore them in the same manner as conventional hearing aids in real-world situations. In this first full DHA all stages of sound processing and control were carried out in binary form. The external sound was picked up by a microphone positioned in an ITE ear module to take advantage of the acoustic effects of the pinna, then converted into binary code, digitally processed and digitally controlled in real time, then converted back to an analog signal sent to two miniature loudspeakers positioned in the same ITE ear module. The ITE module also contained an inward facing microphone to measure the sound actually generated in the ear canal, a precursor to separate probe tube measures now routinely used for hearing aid fitting. The necessary electronic components, including batteries, to support this arrangement were situated in a BTE module that could be supplemented with a body worn module. These specialized hearing aid chips continued to become smaller, increase in computational ability and require even less power. Now, virtually all commercial hearing aids are fully digital and their digital signal processing capability has significantly increased. Very small and very low power specialized digital hearing aid chips are now used in all hearing aids manufactured worldwide. Many additional new features also have been added with various on-board advanced wireless technology.[71]

Regulation edit

Canada edit

Hearing aids are Class II[72] regulated medical devices under Canada's Food and Drugs Act.

Under Health Canada, the Medical Devices Directorate (MDD) regulates the safety, quality, and effectiveness of hearing aids. All hearing aids imported and sold in Canada are subject to a pre-market review. Post-market, Health Canada monitors the performance of the hearing aid and any consumer complaints.

Hearing aid financial assistance is available at both the federal and provincial level. Provincial hearing aid assistance and coverage can vary widely depending on the province and territory.[73]

In Canada, a prescription is required to purchase hearing aids. Only licensed audiologists, Ear, Nose and Throat (ENT) doctors, hearing instrument practitioners, and audioprothesistes (in Quebec) can prescribe hearing aids. Over-the-counter (OTC) hearing aids are currently not available for sale in Canada.

Canadian taxpayers can claim tax relief for hearing aids as a medical expense.[74]

Ireland edit

Like much of the Irish health care system, hearing aid provision is a mixture of public and private.

Hearing aids are provided by the state to children, OAPs[definition needed] and to people whose income is at or below that of the state pension. The Irish state hearing aid provision is extremely poor;[editorializing] people often have to wait for two years for an appointment.[citation needed]

It is estimated that the total cost to the state of supplying one hearing aid exceeds €2,000.[citation needed]

Hearing aids are also available privately, and there is grant assistance available for insured workers. For the fiscal year ending 2016, the grant stands at a maximum of €500 per ear.[75]

Irish taxpayers can also claim tax relief at the standard rate as hearing aids are recognised as a medical device.

Hearing aids in the Republic of Ireland are exempt from VAT.

Hearing aid providers in Ireland mostly belong to the Irish Society of Hearing Aid Audiologists.

United States edit

Ordinary hearing aids are Class I regulated medical devices under Federal Food and Drug Administration (FDA) rules.[76] A 1976 statute explicitly prohibits any state requirement that is "different from, or in addition to, any requirement applicable" to regulated medical devices (which includes hearing aids) which relates "to the safety and effectiveness of the device".[76] Inconsistent state regulation is preempted under the federal law.[77] In the late 1970s, the FDA established federal rules governing hearing aid sales,[78] and addressed various requests by state authorities for exemptions from federal preemption, granting some and denying others.[79] The Over-the-Counter Hearing Aid Act (OTC Act) was passed under the FDA Reauthorization Act of 2017, creating a class of hearing aids regulated by the FDA available directly to consumers without involvement from a licensed professional. This law's provisions are expected to go into effect in 2020.[80]

In August 2022, the FDA issued a final rule to improve access to hearing aids.[81][82] The action establishes a new category of over-the-counter (OTC) hearing aids, enabling consumers with perceived mild to moderate hearing impairment to purchase hearing aids directly from stores or online retailers without the need for a medical exam, prescription or a fitting adjustment by an audiologist.[81] The FDA action amends existing rules that apply to prescription hearing aids for consistency with the new OTC category, it repeals the conditions for sale for hearing aids, and it includes provisions that address some of the effects of the FDA OTC hearing aid regulations on state regulation of hearing aids.[81] The FDA also issued the final guidance, Regulatory Requirements for Hearing Aid Devices and Personal Sound Amplification Products (PSAPs), to clarify the differences between hearing aids, which are medical devices, and PSAPs, consumer products that help people with normal hearing amplify sounds.[81][83]

Cost edit

 
Hearing aid shop, Dublin, Ireland

Several industrialized countries supply free or heavily discounted hearing aids through their publicly funded health care system.

Australia edit

The Australian Department of Health and Ageing provides eligible Australian citizens and residents with a basic hearing aid free-of-charge, though recipients can pay a "top up" charge if they wish to upgrade to a hearing aid with more or better features. Maintenance of these hearing aids and a regular supply of batteries is also provided, on payment of a small annual maintenance fee.[84]

Canada edit

In Canada, health care is a responsibility of the provinces. In the province of Ontario, the price of hearing aids is partially reimbursed through the Assistive Devices Program of the Ministry of Health and Long-Term care, up to $500 for each hearing aid. Like eye appointments, audiological appointments are no longer covered through the provincial public health plan. Audiometric testing can still easily be obtained, often free of charge, in private sector hearing aid clinics and some ear, nose and throat doctors offices. Hearing aids may be covered to some extent by private insurance or in some cases through government programs such as Veterans Affairs Canada or Workplace Safety & Insurance Board.

Iceland edit

Social Insurance pays a one time fee of ISK 30,000 for any kind of hearing aid. However, the rules are complicated[editorializing] and require that both ears have significant hearing loss in order to qualify for reimbursement. BTE hearing aids range from ISK 60,000 to ISK 300,000.[85]

India edit

In India hearing aids of all kinds are easily available. Under central and state government health services, the poor can often avail themselves of free hearing devices. However, market prices vary for others and can range from Rs 10,000 to Rs 275,000 per ear.

United Kingdom edit

From 2000 to 2005 the Department of Health worked with Action on Hearing Loss (then called RNID) to improve the quality of NHS hearing aids so every NHS audiology department in England was fitting digital hearing aids by March 2005. By 2003 over 175,000 NHS digital hearing aids had been fitted to 125,000 people. Private companies were recruited to enhance the capacity, and two were appointed – David Ormerod Hearing Centres, partly owned by Alliance Boots and Ultravox Group, a subsidiary of Amplifon.[86]

Within the UK, the NHS provides digital BTE hearing aids to NHS patients, on long-term loan, free of charge. Other than BAHAs (bone anchored hearing aid) or cochlear implants, where specifically required, BTEs are usually the only style available. Private purchases may be necessary if a user desires a different style. Batteries are free.[87]

In 2014 the Clinical Commissioning Group in North Staffordshire considered proposals to end provision of free hearing aids for adults with mild to moderate age related hearing loss, which currently cost them £1.2m a year. Action on Hearing Loss mobilised a campaign against the proposal.[88]

In June 2018 the National Institute for Health and Care Excellence produced new guidance saying that hearing aids should be offered at the first opportunity when hearing loss affects the individual's ability to hear and communicate, rather than waiting for arbitrary thresholds of hearing loss to be reached.[89]

United States edit

Most private healthcare providers in the United States do not provide coverage for hearing aids, so all costs are usually borne by the recipient. The cost for a single hearing aid can vary between $500 and $6,000 or more, depending on the level of technology and whether the clinician bundles fitting fees into the cost of the hearing aid. Though if an adult has hearing loss which substantially limits major life activities, some state-run vocational rehabilitation programs can provide upwards of full financial assistance. Severe and profound hearing loss often falls within the "substantially limiting" category.[90] Less expensive hearing aids can be found on the internet or mail order catalogs, but most in the under-$200 range tend to amplify the low frequencies of background noise, making it harder to hear the human voice.[91][92]

Military veterans receiving VA medical care are eligible for hearing aids based on medical need. The Veterans Administration pays the full cost of testing and hearing aids to qualified military veterans. Major VA medical facilities provide complete diagnostic and audiology services.[citation needed]

The cost of hearing aids is a tax-deductible medical expense for those who itemize medical deductions.[93]

Research involving more than 40,000 US households showed a convincing correlation between the degree of hearing loss and the reduction of personal income. According to the same research, hearing aids were shown to mitigate the impact of income loss by 90%–100% for those with milder hearing losses and from 65%–77% for those with severe to moderate hearing loss.[94]

Batteries edit

While there are some instances that a hearing aid uses a rechargeable battery or a long-life disposable battery, the majority of modern hearing aids use one of five standard button cell zinc–air batteries. (Older hearing aids often used mercury battery cells, but these cells have become banned in most countries today.) Modern hearing aid button cell types are typically referred to by their common number name or the color of their packaging.

They are typically loaded into the hearing aid via a rotating battery door, with the flat side (case) as the positive terminal (cathode) and the rounded side as the negative terminal (anode).

These batteries all operate from 1.35 to 1.45 volts.

The type of battery a specific hearing aid utilizes depends on the physical size allowable and the desired lifetime of the battery, which is in turn determined by the power draw of the hearing aid device. Typical battery lifetimes run between 1 and 14 days (assuming 16-hour days).

Hearing Aid Battery Types
Type/ Color Code Dimensions (Diameter×Height) Common Uses Standard Names Misc Names
675 11.6 mm × 5.4 mm High-Power BTEs, Cochlear implants IEC: PR44, ANSI: 7003ZD 675, 675A, 675AE, 675AP, 675CA, 675CP, 675HP, 675HPX, 675 Implant Plus, 675P (HP), 675PA, 675SA, 675SP, A675, A675P, AC675, AC675E, AC675E/EZ, AC675EZ, AC-675E, AP675, B675PA, B6754, B900PA, C675, DA675, DA675H, DA675H/N, DA675N, DA675X, H675AE, L675ZA, ME9Z, P675, P675i+, PR44, PR44P, PR675, PR675H, PR675P, PR-675PA, PZ675, PZA675, R675ZA, S675A, V675, V675A, V675AT, VT675, XL675, Z675PX, ZA675, ZA675HP
13 7.9 mm × 5.4 mm BTEs, ITEs IEC: PR48, ANSI: 7000ZD 13, 13A, 13AE, 13AP, 13HP, 13HPX, 13P, 13PA, 13SA, 13ZA, A13, AC13, AC13E, AC13E/EZ, AC13EZ, AC-13E, AP13, B13BA, B0134, B26PA, CP48, DA13, DA13H, DA13H/N, DA13N, DA13X, E13E, L13ZA, ME8Z, P13, PR13, PR13H, PR-13PA, PZ13, PZA13, R13ZA, S13A, V13A, VT13, V13AT, W13ZA, XL13, ZA13
312 7.9 mm × 3.6 mm miniBTEs, RICs, ITCs IEC: PR41, ANSI: 7002ZD 312, 312A, 312AE, 312AP, 312HP, 312HPX, 312P, 312PA, 312SA, 312ZA, AC312, AC312E, AC312E/EZ, AC312EZ, AC-312E, AP312, B312BA, B3124, B347PA, CP41, DA312, DA312H, DA312H/N, DA312N, DA312X, E312E, H312AE, L312ZA, ME7Z, P312, PR312, PR312H, PR-312PA, PZ312, PZA312, R312ZA, S312A, V312A, V312AT, VT312, W312ZA, XL312, ZA312
10 5.8 mm × 3.6 mm CICs, RICs IEC: PR70, ANSI: 7005ZD 10, 10A, 10AE, 10AP, 10DS, 10HP, 10HPX, 10SA, 10UP, 20PA, 230, 230E, 230EZ, 230HPX, AC10, AC10EZ, AC10/230, AC10/230E, AC10/230EZ, AC230, AC230E, AC230E/EZ, AC230EZ, AC-230E, AP10, B0104, B20BA, B20PA, CP35, DA10, DA10H, DA10H/N, DA10N, DA230, DA230/10, L10ZA, ME10Z, P10, PR10, PR10H, PR230H, PR536, PR-10PA, PR-230PA, PZA230, R10ZA, S10A, V10, VT10, V10AT, V10HP, V230AT, W10ZA, XL10, ZA10
5 5.8 mm × 2.1 mm CICs IEC: PR63, ANSI: 7012ZD 5A, 5AE, 5HPX, 5SA, AC5, AC5E, AP5, B7PA, CP63, CP521, L5ZA, ME5Z, P5, PR5H, PR-5PA, PR521, R5ZA, S5A, V5AT, VT5, XL5, ZA5

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Further reading edit

  • Chen CH, Huang CY, Cheng HL, Lin HH, Chu YC, Chang CY, et al. (April 2022). "Comparison of personal sound amplification products and conventional hearing aids for patients with hearing loss: A systematic review with meta-analysis". eClinicalMedicine. 46: 101378. doi:10.1016/j.eclinm.2022.101378. PMC 9006672. PMID 35434580.
  • Mamo SK, Reed NS, Nieman CL, Oh ES, Lin FR (March 2016). "Personal Sound Amplifiers for Adults with Hearing Loss". The American Journal of Medicine. 129 (3): 245–50. doi:10.1016/j.amjmed.2015.09.014. PMC 4755807. PMID 26498713.

External links edit

hearing, hearing, device, designed, improve, hearing, making, sound, audible, person, with, hearing, loss, classified, medical, devices, most, countries, regulated, respective, regulations, small, audio, amplifiers, such, personal, sound, amplification, produc. A hearing aid is a device designed to improve hearing by making sound audible to a person with hearing loss Hearing aids are classified as medical devices in most countries and regulated by the respective regulations Small audio amplifiers such as personal sound amplification products PSAPs or other plain sound reinforcing systems cannot be sold as hearing aids Hearing aidIn the canal hearing aidOther namesDeaf aid edit on Wikidata Early devices such as ear trumpets or ear horns 1 2 were passive amplification cones designed to gather sound energy and direct it into the ear canal Modern devices are computerised electroacoustic systems that transform environmental sound to make it audible according to audiometrical and cognitive rules Modern devices also utilize sophisticated digital signal processing to try and improve speech intelligibility and comfort for the user Such signal processing includes feedback management wide dynamic range compression directionality frequency lowering and noise reduction Modern hearing aids require configuration to match the hearing loss physical features and lifestyle of the wearer The hearing aid is fitted to the most recent audiogram and is programmed by frequency This process called fitting can be performed by the user in simple cases by a Doctor of Audiology also called an audiologist AuD or by a Hearing Instrument Specialist HIS or audioprosthologist The amount of benefit a hearing aid delivers depends in large part on the quality of its fitting Almost all hearing aids in use in the US are digital hearing aids as analog aids are phased out 3 Devices similar to hearing aids include the osseointegrated auditory prosthesis formerly called the bone anchored hearing aid and cochlear implant Contents 1 Uses 2 Candidacy and acquisition 3 Types 3 1 Body worn 3 2 Behind the ear 3 3 In the ear 3 4 Invisible in canal hearing aids 3 5 Extended wear hearing aids 3 6 CROS hearing aid 3 7 Bone anchored 3 8 Eyeglass aids 3 8 1 Spectacle hearing aids 3 8 2 Bone conduction spectacles 3 8 3 Air conduction spectacles 3 8 4 Directional spectacles 3 9 Stethoscope 3 10 Hearing aid applications 4 Technology 4 1 Compatibility with telephones 4 2 Wireless 4 3 Directional microphone 4 4 Telecoil 4 4 1 Legislation affecting use 4 5 Audio boot 4 6 Direct audio input 4 7 Processing 4 7 1 Analog 4 7 2 Digital 4 7 3 Difference between digital and analog hearing aids 4 7 4 Difference between digital hearing aids and hearing aid applications 5 Difference between PSAP and digital hearing aids 6 Evolution of hearing aid applications 7 Hearing aid adaptation 8 History 8 1 History of digital aids 9 Regulation 9 1 Canada 9 2 Ireland 9 3 United States 10 Cost 10 1 Australia 10 2 Canada 10 3 Iceland 10 4 India 10 5 United Kingdom 10 6 United States 11 Batteries 12 References 13 Further reading 14 External linksUses editHearing aids are used for a variety of pathologies including sensorineural hearing loss conductive hearing loss and single sided deafness Hearing aid candidacy was traditionally determined by a Doctor of Audiology or a certified hearing specialist who will also fit the device based on the nature and degree of the hearing loss being treated The amount of benefit experienced by the user of the hearing aid is multi factorial depending on the type severity and etiology of the hearing loss the technology and fitting of the device and on the motivation personality lifestyle and overall health of the user 4 Over the counter hearing aids which address mild to moderate hearing loss are designed to be adjusted by the user 5 Hearing aids are incapable of truly correcting a hearing loss they are an aid to make sounds more audible The most common form of hearing loss for which hearing aids are sought is sensorineural resulting from damage to the hair cells and synapses of the cochlea and auditory nerve Sensorineural hearing loss reduces the sensitivity to sound which a hearing aid can partially accommodate by making sound louder Other decrements in auditory perception caused by sensorineural hearing loss such as abnormal spectral and temporal processing and which may negatively affect speech perception are more difficult to compensate for using digital signal processing and in some cases may be exacerbated by the use of amplification 6 page needed Conductive hearing losses which do not involve damage to the cochlea tend to be better treated by hearing aids the hearing aid is able to sufficiently amplify sound to account for the attenuation caused by the conductive component Once the sound is able to reach the cochlea at normal or near normal levels the cochlea and auditory nerve are able to transmit signals to the brain normally Common issues with hearing aid fitting and use are the occlusion effect loudness recruitment and understanding speech in noise Once a common problem feedback is generally now well controlled through the use of feedback management algorithms Candidacy and acquisition editThere are several ways of evaluating how well a hearing aid compensates for hearing loss One approach is audiometry which measures a subject s hearing levels in laboratory conditions The threshold of audibility for various sounds and intensities is measured in a variety of conditions Although audiometric tests may attempt to mimic real world conditions the patient s own every day experiences may differ An alternative approach is self report assessment where the patient reports their experience with the hearing aid 7 8 Hearing aid outcome can be represented by three dimensions 9 hearing aid usage aided speech recognition benefit satisfactionThe most reliable method for assessing the correct adjustment of a hearing aid is through real ear measurement 10 Real ear measurements or probe microphone measurements are an assessment of the characteristics of hearing aid amplification near the ear drum using a silicone probe tube microphone 11 Current research is also pointing towards hearing aids and proper amplification as a treatment for tinnitus a medical condition which manifests itself as a ringing or buzzing in the ears 12 Types editThere are many types of hearing aids also known as hearing instruments which vary in size power and circuitry Among the different sizes and models are nbsp Vacuum tube hearing aid circa 1944 nbsp Transistor body worn hearing aid nbsp Pair of BTE hearing aids with earmolds nbsp Receiver in the canal hearing aids nbsp In the ear hearing aid nbsp In the canal hearing aid nbsp Woman wearing a bone anchored hearing aid nbsp Hearing aid applicationBody worn edit Body worn aids were the first portable electronic hearing aids and were invented by Harvey Fletcher while working at Bell Laboratories 13 Body aids consist of a case and an earmold attached by a wire The case contains the electronic amplifier components controls and battery while the earmold typically contains a miniature loudspeaker The case is typically about the size of a pack of playing cards and is carried in a pocket or on a belt 14 Without the size constraints of smaller hearing devices body worn aid designs can provide large amplification and long battery life at a lower cost Body aids are still used in emerging markets because of their relatively low cost 14 Behind the ear edit nbsp A modern behind the ear hearing aid The audio tube to the speaker is barely visible nbsp A modern behind the ear hearing aid with a minicell batteryBehind the ear hearing aids are one of two major classes of hearing aids behind the ear BTE and in the ear ITE These two classes are distinguished by where the hearing aid is worn BTE hearing aids consist of a case which hangs behind the pinna The case is attached to an earmold or dome tip by a traditional tube slim tube or wire The tube or wire courses from the superior ventral portion of the pinna to the concha where the ear mold or dome tip inserts into the external auditory canal The case contains the electronics controls battery and microphone s The loudspeaker or receiver may be housed in the case traditional BTE or in the earmold or dome tip receiver in the canal or RIC The RIC style of BTE hearing aid is often smaller than a traditional BTE and more commonly used in more active populations 15 BTEs are generally capable of providing more output and may therefore be indicated for more severe degrees of hearing loss However BTEs are very versatile and can be used for nearly any kind of hearing loss BTEs come in a variety of sizes ranging from a small mini BTE to larger ultra power devices Size typically depends on the output level needed the location of the receiver and the presence or absence of a telecoil BTEs are durable easy to repair and often have controls and battery doors that are easier to manipulate BTEs are also easily connected to assistive listening devices such as FM systems and induction loops BTEs are commonly worn by children who need a durable type of hearing aid 14 In the ear edit In the ear aids ITE devices fit in the outer ear bowl called the concha Being larger these are easier to insert and can hold extra features 16 They are sometimes visible when standing face to face with someone ITE hearing aids are custom made to fit each individual s ear They can be used in mild to some severe hearing losses Feedback a squealing whistling caused by sound particularly high frequency sound leaking and being amplified again may be a problem for severe hearing losses 17 Some modern circuits are able to provide feedback regulation or cancellation to assist with this Venting may also cause feedback A vent is a tube primarily placed to offer pressure equalization However different vent styles and sizes can be used to influence and prevent feedback 18 Traditionally ITEs have not been recommended for young children because their fit could not be as easily modified as the earmold for a BTE and thus the aid had to be replaced frequently as the child grew 19 However there are new ITEs made from a silicone type material that mitigates the need for costly replacements ITE hearing aids can be connected wirelessly to FM systems for instance with a body worn FM receiver with induction neck loop which transmits the audio signal from the FM transmitter inductively to the telecoil inside the hearing instrument Mini in canal MIC or completely in canal CIC aids are generally not visible unless the viewer looks directly into the wearer s ear 20 21 These aids are intended for mild to moderately severe losses CICs are usually not recommended for people with good low frequency hearing as the occlusion effect is much more noticeable 22 Completely in the canal hearing aids fit tightly deep in the ear 16 It is barely visible 16 Being small it will not have a directional microphone and its small batteries will have a short life and the batteries and controls may be difficult to manage 16 Its position in the ear prevents wind noise and makes it easier to use phones without feedback 16 In the canal hearing aids are placed deep in the ear canal 16 They are barely visible 16 Larger versions of these can have directional microphones 16 Being in the canal they are less likely to cause a plugged feeling 16 These models are easier to manipulate than the smaller completely in the canal models but still have the drawbacks of being rather small 16 In the ear hearing aids are typically more expensive than behind the ear counterparts of equal functionality because they are custom fitted to the patient s ear In fitting the audiologist takes a physical impression mold of the ear The mold is scanned by a specialized CAD system resulting in a 3D model of the outer ear During modeling the venting tube is inserted The digitally modeled shell is printed using a rapid prototyping technique such as stereolithography Finally the aid is assembled and shipped to the audiologist after a quality check 23 Invisible in canal hearing aids edit Invisible in canal hearing aids IIC style of hearing aids fits inside the ear canal completely leaving little to no trace of an installed hearing aid visible This is because it fits deeper in the canal than other types so that it is out of view even when looking directly into the ear bowl concha A comfortable fit is achieved because the shell of the aid is custom made to the individual ear canal after taking a mold Invisible hearing aid types use venting and their deep placement in the ear canal to give a more natural experience of hearing Unlike other hearing aid types with the IIC aid the majority of the ear is not blocked occluded by a large plastic shell This means that sound can be collected more naturally by the shape of the ear and can travel down into the ear canal as it would with unassisted hearing Depending on their size some models allow the wearer to use a mobile phone as a remote control to alter memory and volume settings instead of taking the IIC out to do this IIC types are most suitable for users up to middle age but are not suitable for elderly people with unsteady hands 24 Extended wear hearing aids edit Main article Extended wear hearing aid Extended wear hearing aids are hearing devices that are non surgically placed in the ear canal by a hearing professional The extended wear hearing aid represents the first invisible hearing device These devices are worn for 1 3 months at a time without removal They are made of soft material designed to contour to each user and can be used by people with mild to moderately severe hearing loss Their close proximity to the ear drum results in improved sound directionality and localization reduced feedback and improved high frequency gain 25 While traditional BTE or ITC hearing aids require daily insertion and removal extended wear hearing aids are worn continuously and then replaced with a new device Users can change volume and settings without the aid of a hearing professional The devices are very useful for active individuals because their design protects against moisture and earwax and can be worn while exercising showering etc Because the device s placement within the ear canal makes them invisible to observers extended wear hearing aids are popular with those who are self conscious about the aesthetics of BTE or ITC hearing aid models As with other hearing devices compatibility is based on an individual s hearing loss ear size and shape medical conditions and lifestyle The disadvantages include regular removal and reinsertion of the device when the battery dies inability to go underwater earplugs when showering and for some discomfort with the fit since it is inserted deeply in the ear canal the only part of the body where skin rests directly on top of bone CROS hearing aid edit Main article CROS hearing aid A CROS hearing aid is a hearing aid that transmits auditory information from one side of the head to the other side of the head Candidates include people who have poor word understanding on one side no hearing on one side or who are not benefiting from a hearing aid on one side CROS hearing aids can appear very similar to behind the ear hearing aids The CROS system can assist the patient in sound localization and understanding auditory information on their poor side While CROS hearing aids can be quite effective the long term solution for those with hearing issues on one side is to use a BiCROS system citation needed This creates more of a balance for wearers Bone anchored edit Main article Bone anchored hearing aid A bone anchored hearing aid BAHA is a surgically implanted auditory prosthetic based on bone conduction It is an option for patients without external ear canals when conventional hearing aids with a mold in the ear cannot be used The BAHA uses the skull as a pathway for sound to travel to the inner ear For people with conductive hearing loss the BAHA bypasses the external auditory canal and middle ear stimulating the functioning cochlea For people with unilateral hearing loss the BAHA uses the skull to conduct the sound from the deaf side to the side with the functioning cochlea Individuals under the age of two five in the USA typically wear the BAHA device on a Softband This can be worn from the age of one month as babies tend to tolerate this arrangement very well When the child s skull bone is sufficiently thick a titanium post can be surgically embedded into the skull with a small abutment exposed outside the skin The BAHA sound processor sits on this abutment and transmits sound vibrations to the external abutment of the titanium implant The implant vibrates the skull and inner ear which stimulate the nerve fibers of the inner ear allowing hearing The surgical procedure is simple both for the surgeon involving very few risks for the experienced ear surgeon For the patient minimal discomfort and pain is reported Patients may experience numbness of the area around the implant as small superficial nerves in the skin are sectioned during the procedure This often disappears after some time There is no risk of further hearing loss due to the surgery One important feature of the BAHA is that if a patient for whatever reason does not want to continue with the arrangement it takes the surgeon less than a minute to remove it The BAHA does not restrict the wearer from any activities such as outdoor life sporting activities etc A BAHA can be connected to an FM system by attaching a miniaturized FM receiver to it Two main brands manufacture BAHAs today the original inventors Cochlear and the hearing aid company Oticon Eyeglass aids edit During the late 1950s through 1970s before in the ear aids became common and in an era when thick rimmed eyeglasses were popular people who wore both glasses and hearing aids frequently chose a type of hearing aid that was built into the temple pieces of the spectacles 26 However the combination of glasses and hearing aids was inflexible the range of frame styles was limited and the user had to wear both hearing aids and glasses at once or wear neither 27 Today people who use both glasses and hearing aids can use in the ear types or rest a BTE neatly alongside the arm of the glasses There are still some specialized situations where hearing aids built into the frame of eyeglasses can be useful such as when a person has hearing loss mainly in one ear sound from a microphone on the bad side can be sent through the frame to the side with better hearing This can also be achieved by using CROS or bi CROS style hearing aids which are now wireless in sending sound to the better side Spectacle hearing aids edit These are generally worn by people with a hearing loss who either prefer a more cosmetic appeal of their hearing aids by being attached to their glasses or where sound cannot be passed in the normal way via a hearing aids perhaps due to a blockage in the ear canal pathway or if the client experiences continual infections in the ear Spectacle aids come in two forms bone conduction spectacles and air conduction spectacles Bone conduction spectacles edit Sounds are transmitted via a receiver attached from the arm of the spectacles which are fitted firmly behind the boney portion of the skull at the back of the ear mastoid process by means of pressure applied on the arm of the spectacles The sound is passed from the receiver on the arm of the spectacles to the inner ear cochlea via the bony portion The process of transmitting the sound through the bone requires a great amount of power Bone conduction aids generally have a poorer high pitch response and are therefore best used for conductive hearing losses or where it is impractical to fit standard hearing aids Air conduction spectacles edit Unlike the bone conduction spectacles the sound is transmitted via hearing aids which are attached to the arm or arms of the spectacles When removing your glasses for cleaning the hearing aids are detached at the same time Whilst there are genuine instances where spectacle aids are a preferred choice they may not always be the most practical option Directional spectacles edit These hearing glasses incorporate a directional microphone capability four microphones on each side of the frame effectively work as two directional microphones which are able to discern between sound coming from the front and sound coming from the sides or back of the user 28 This improves the signal to noise ratio by allowing for amplification of the sound coming from the front the direction in which the user is looking and active noise control for sounds coming from the sides or behind Only very recently has the technology required become small enough to be fitted in the frame of the glasses As a recent addition to the market this new hearing aid is currently available only in the Netherlands and Belgium 29 Stethoscope edit These hearing aids are designed for medical practitioners with hearing loss who use stethoscopes The hearing aid is built into the speaker of the stethoscope which amplifies the sound Hearing aid applications edit Hearing aid applications HAA are software which when installed on mobile computational platforms transforms them into hearing aids 30 The principle of HAA operation corresponds to the basic principles of operation of traditional hearing aids the microphone receives an acoustic signal and converts it into a digital form Sound amplification is achieved by the means of a mobile computational platform in accordance with the degree and type of the user s hearing loss The processed audio signal is transformed into an audio signal and output to the user into the headphones headset Signal processing is implemented in real time Constructional features of mobile computational platforms imply preferred use of stereo headsets with two speakers which allows carrying out binaural hearing correction for the left and right ear separately 31 HAAs can work with both wired and wireless headsets and headphones 32 As a rule HAAs have two operation modes setup mode and hearing aid mode Setup mode involves the user passing an in situ audiometry procedure which determines the user s hearing characteristics Hearing aid mode is a hearing correction system that corrects the user s hearing in accordance with the user s hearing thresholds HAAs also incorporate background noise suppression and acoustic feedback suppression 31 The user can independently choose a formula to enhance the sound as well as adjust the level of the desired amplification to their wishes 32 HAAs have several advantages compared to traditional hearing aids citation needed HAAs do not cause any psychological inconvenience it is possible to achieve the highest sound pressure level and get high sound quality due to large speakers and a long battery life it is possible to use more complex audio signal processing algorithms and a higher sampling rate because of capacious battery the possibility to implement more convenient application control functions for people with poor motor skills resistance to ingress of earwax and moisture software flexibility the large distance between the microphone and the speaker prevents the occurrence of acoustic feedback the set up of HAAs in simple cases does not require special equipment and qualifications the user does not need to purchase and carry any separate device various types of headphones and headsets can be used HAAs also have some disadvantages compared to traditional hearing aids because the microphone is not located in the ear it does not use the functional advantages of the auricle and the natural acoustics of the outer ear 31 they are more noticeable and less comfortable to wear Technology editSee also History of hearing aids The first electrical hearing aid used the carbon microphone of the telephone and was introduced in 1896 The vacuum tube made electronic amplification possible but early versions of amplified hearing aids were too heavy to carry around Miniaturization of vacuum tubes lead to portable models and after World War II wearable models using miniature tubes The transistor invented in 1948 was well suited to the hearing aid application due to low power and small size hearing aids were an early adopter of transistors The development of integrated circuits allowed further improvement of the capabilities of wearable aids including implementation of digital signal processing techniques and programmability for the individual user s needs Compatibility with telephones edit nbsp A sign in a train station explains that the public announcement system uses a Hearing Induction Loop audio induction loop Hearing aid users can use a telecoil T switch to hear announcements directly through their hearing aid receiver A hearing aid and a telephone are compatible when they can connect to each other in a way that produces clear easily understood sound The term compatibility is applied to all three types of telephones wired cordless and mobile There are two ways telephones and hearing aids can connect with each other Acoustically the sound from the phone s speaker is picked up by the hearing aid s microphone Electromagnetically the signal inside the phone s speaker is picked up by the hearing aid s telecoil or T coil a special loop of wire inside the hearing aid Note that telecoil coupling has nothing to do with the radio signal in a cellular or cordless phone the audio signal picked up by the telecoil is the weak electromagnetic field that is generated by the voice coil in the phone s speaker as it pushes the speaker cone back and forth The electromagnetic telecoil mode is usually more effective than the acoustic method This is mainly because the microphone is often automatically switched off when the hearing aid is operating in telecoil mode so background noise is not amplified Since there is an electronic connection to the phone the sound is clearer and distortion is less likely But in order for this to work the phone has to be hearing aid compatible More technically the phone s speaker has to have a voice coil that generates a relatively strong electromagnetic field Speakers with strong voice coils are more expensive and require more energy than the tiny ones used in many modern telephones phones with the small low power speakers cannot couple electromagnetically with the telecoil in the hearing aid so the hearing aid must then switch to acoustic mode Also many mobile phones emit high levels of electromagnetic noise that creates audible static in the hearing aid when the telecoil is used A workaround that resolves this issue on many mobile phones is to plug a wired not Bluetooth headset into the mobile phone with the headset placed near the hearing aid the phone can be held far enough away to attenuate the static Another method is to use a neckloop which is like a portable around the neck induction loop and plug the neckloop directly into the standard audio jack headphones jack of a smartphone or laptop or stereo etc Then with the hearing aids telecoil turned on usually a button to press the sound will travel directly from the phone through the neckloop and into the hearing aids telecoils 33 On 21 March 2007 the Telecommunications Industry Association issued the TIA 1083 standard 34 which gives manufacturers of cordless telephones the ability to test their products for compatibility with most hearing aids that have a T Coil magnetic coupling mode With this testing digital cordless phone manufacturers will be able to inform consumers about which products will work with their hearing aids 35 The American National Standards Institute ANSI has a ratings scale for compatibility between hearing aids and phones When operating in acoustic Microphone mode the ratings are from M1 worst to M4 best When operating in electromagnetic Telecoil mode the ratings are from T1 worst to T4 best The best possible rating is M4 T4 meaning that the phone works well in both modes Devices rated below M3 are unsatisfactory for people with hearing aids Computer programs that allow the creation of a hearing aid using a PC tablet or smartphone are currently gaining in popularity 36 Modern mobile devices have all the necessary components to implement this hardware an ordinary microphone and headphones may be used and a high performance microprocessor that carries digital sound processing according to a given algorithm Application configuration is carried out by the user themselves in accordance with the individual features of their hearing ability The computational power of modern mobile devices is sufficient to produce the best sound quality This coupled with software application settings for example profile selection according to a sound environment provides for high comfort and convenience of use In comparison with the digital hearing aid mobile applications have the following advantages acoustic gain is up to 30 dB with a standard headset complete invisibility smartphone is not associated with a hearing aid ease of use no need to use additional devices batteries and so on Fast switching between the external headset and phone microphone free distribution of applications High duration of the battery high sampling frequency 44 1 kHz providing for excellent sound quality high wearing comfort low delay in audio processing from 6 3 to 15 7 ms depending on the mobile device model No loss of settings when switching from one gadget to another and back again No need to get used to it when changing mobile devices user friendly interface of software settings It should be clearly understood that hearing aid application for smartphone tablet cannot be considered a complete substitution of a digital hearing aid since the latter is a medical device exposed to the relevant procedures of testing and certification is adjusted using audiometry procedures 37 is designed for use by doctor s prescription Functionality of hearing aid applications may involve a hearing test in situ audiometry too However the results of the test are used only to adjust the device for comfortable working with the application The procedure of hearing testing in any way cannot claim to replace an audiometry test carried out by a medical specialist so cannot be a basis for diagnosis Apps such as Oticon ON for certain iOS Apple and Android devices can assist in locating a lost misplaced hearing aid 38 Wireless edit Recent hearing aids include wireless hearing aids One hearing aid can transmit to the other side so that pressing one aid s program button simultaneously changes the other aid so that both aids change background settings simultaneously FM listening systems are now emerging with wireless receivers integrated with the use of hearing aids A separate wireless microphone can be given to a partner to wear in a restaurant in the car during leisure time in the shopping mall at lectures or during religious services The voice is transmitted wirelessly to the hearing aids eliminating the effects of distance and background noise FM systems have shown to give the best speech understanding in noise of all available technologies FM systems can also be hooked up to a TV or a stereo 2 4 gigahertz Bluetooth connectivity is the most recent innovation in wireless interfacing for hearing instruments to audio sources such as TV streamers or Bluetooth enabled mobile phones Current hearing aids generally do not stream directly via Bluetooth but rather do so through a secondary streaming device usually worn around the neck or in a pocket this bluetooth enabled secondary device then streams wirelessly to the hearing aid but can only do so over a short distance This technology can be applied to ready to wear devices BTE Mini BTE RIE etc or to custom made devices that fit directly into the ear 39 nbsp Oticon hearing aids for use with Bluetooth wireless devices nbsp Phonak wireless FM systemIn developed countries FM systems are considered a cornerstone in the treatment of hearing loss in children More and more adults discover the benefits of wireless FM systems as well especially since transmitters with different microphone settings and Bluetooth for wireless cell phone communication have become available 40 Many theatres and lecture halls are now equipped with assistive listening systems that transmit the sound directly from the stage audience members can borrow suitable receivers and hear the program without background noise In some theatres and churches FM transmitters are available that work with the personal FM receivers of hearing instruments Directional microphone edit Most older hearing aids have only an omnidirectional microphone An omnidirectional microphone amplifies sounds equally from all directions In contrast a directional microphone amplifies sounds from one direction more than sounds from other directions This means that sounds originating from the direction the system is steered toward are amplified more than sounds coming from other directions If the desired speech arrives from the direction of steering and the noise is from a different direction then compared to an omnidirectional microphone a directional microphone provides a better signal to noise ratio Improving the signal to noise ratio improves speech understanding in noise Directional microphones have been found to be the second best method to improve the signal to noise ratio the best method was an FM system which locates the microphone near the mouth of the desired talker 41 Many hearing aids have both an omnidirectional and a directional microphone mode citation needed This is because the wearer may not need or desire the noise reducing properties of the directional microphone in a given situation citation needed Typically the omnidirectional microphone mode is used in quiet listening situations e g living room whereas the directional microphone is used in noisy listening situations e g restaurant citation needed The microphone mode is typically selected manually by the wearer citation needed Some hearing aids automatically switch the microphone mode citation needed Adaptive directional microphones automatically vary the direction of maximum amplification or rejection to reduce an interfering directional sound source The direction of amplification or rejection is varied by the hearing aid processor The processor attempts to provide maximum amplification in the direction of the desired speech signal source or rejection in the direction of the interfering signal source Unless the user manually temporarily switches to a restaurant program forward only mode adaptive directional microphones frequently amplify the speech of other talkers in a cocktail party type environments such as restaurants or coffee shops this can also be helpful during business meetings The presence of multiple speech signals makes it difficult for the processor to correctly select the desired speech signal Another disadvantage is that some noises often contain characteristics similar to speech making it difficult for the hearing aid processor to distinguish the speech from the noise Despite the disadvantages adaptive directional microphones can provide improved speech recognition in noise 42 FM systems have been found to provide a better signal to noise ratio even at larger speaker to talker distances in simulated testing conditions 43 Telecoil edit Main article Audio induction loop Telecoils or T coils from Telephone Coils are small devices installed in hearing aids or cochlear implants An audio induction loop generates an electromagnetic field that can be detected by T coils allowing audio sources to be directly connected to a hearing aid The T coil is intended to help the wearer filter out background noise They can be used with telephones FM systems with neck loops and induction loop systems also called hearing loops that transmit sound to hearing aids from public address systems and TVs In the UK and the Nordic countries hearing loops are widely used in churches shops railway stations and other public places In the US telecoils and hearing loops are gradually becoming more common Audio induction loops telecoils and hearing loops are gradually becoming more common also in Slovenia A T coil consists of a metal core or rod around which ultra fine wire is coiled T coils are also called induction coils because when the coil is placed in a magnetic field an alternating electric current is induced in the wire Ross 2002b Ross 2004 The T coil detects magnetic energy and transduces converts it to electrical energy In the United States the Telecommunications Industry Association s TIA 1083 standard specifies how analog handsets can interact with telecoil devices to ensure the optimal performance 44 Although T coils are effectively a wide band receiver interference is unusual in most hearing loop situations Interference can manifest as a buzzing sound which varies in volume depending on the distance the wearer is from the source Sources are electromagnetic fields such as CRT computer monitors older fluorescent lighting some dimmer switches many household electrical appliances and airplanes The states of Florida and Arizona have passed legislation that requires hearing professionals to inform patients about the usefulness of telecoils Legislation affecting use edit In the United States the Hearing Aid Compatibility Act of 1988 requires that the Federal Communications Commission FCC ensure that all telephones manufactured or imported for use in the United States after August 1989 and all essential telephones be hearing aid compatible through the use of a telecoil 45 Essential phones are defined as coin operated telephones telephones provided for emergency use and other telephones frequently needed for use by persons using such hearing aids These might include workplace telephones telephones in confined settings like hospitals and nursing homes and telephones in hotel and motel rooms Secure telephones as well as telephones used with public mobile and private radio services are exempt from the HAC Act Secure phones are defined as telephones that are approved by the U S Government for the transmission of classified or sensitive voice communications In 2003 the FCC adopted rules to make digital wireless telephones compatible with hearing aids and cochlear implants Although analog wireless phones do not usually cause interference with hearing aids or cochlear implants digital wireless phones often do because of electromagnetic energy emitted by the phone s antenna backlight or other components The FCC has set a timetable for the development and sale of digital wireless telephones that are compatible with hearing aids This effort promises to increase the number of digital wireless telephones that are hearing aid compatible Older generations of both cordless and mobile phones used analog technology Audio boot edit nbsp A hearing aid with an audio bootAn audio boot or audio shoe is an electronic device used with hearing aids hearing aids often come with a special set of metal contacts for audio input Typically the audio boot will fit around the end of the hearing aid a behind the ear model as in the ear do not afford any purchase for the connection to link it with another device like an FM system or a cellphone or even a digital audio player 46 Direct audio input edit nbsp A DAI plug on the end of a cableDirect audio input DAI allows the hearing aid to be directly connected to an external audio source like a CD player or an assistive listening device ALD By its very nature DAI is susceptible to far less electromagnetic interference and yields a better quality audio signal as opposed to using a T coil with standard headphones An audio boot is a type of device that may be used to facilitate DAI 47 Processing edit Every electronic hearing aid has at minimum a microphone a loudspeaker commonly called a receiver a battery and electronic circuitry The electronic circuitry varies among devices even if they are the same style The circuitry falls into three categories based on the type of audio processing analog or digital and the type of control circuitry adjustable or programmable Hearing aid devices generally do not contain processors strong enough to process complex signal algorithms for sound source localization 48 Analog edit Analog audio may have Adjustable control The audio circuit is analog with electronic components that can be adjusted The hearing professional determines the gain and other specifications required for the wearer and then adjusts the analog components either with small controls on the hearing aid itself or by having a laboratory build the hearing aid to meet those specifications After the adjustment the resulting audio does not change any further other than overall loudness that the wearer adjusts with a volume control This type of circuitry is generally the least flexible The first practical electronic hearing aid with adjustable analog audio circuitry was based on US Patent 2 017 358 Hearing Aid Apparatus and Amplifier by Samual Gordon Taylor filed in 1932 Programmable control The audio circuit is analog but with additional electronic control circuitry that can be programmed by an audiologist often with more than one program 49 The electronic control circuitry can be fixed during manufacturing or in some cases the hearing professional can use an external computer temporarily connected to the hearing aid to program the additional control circuitry The wearer can change the program for different listening environments by pressing buttons either on the device itself or on a remote control or in some cases the additional control circuitry operates automatically This type of circuitry is generally more flexible than simple adjustable controls The first hearing aid with analog audio circuitry and automatic digital electronic control circuitry was based on US Patent 4 025 721 Method of and means for adaptively filtering near stationary noise from speech by D Graupe GD Causey filed in 1975 This digital electronic control circuitry was used to identify and automatically reduce noise in individual frequency channels of the analog audio circuits and was known as the Zeta Noise Blocker Digital edit nbsp Block diagram of digital hearing aidDigital audio programmable control Both the audio circuit and the additional control circuits are fully digital The hearing professional programs the hearing aid with an external computer temporarily connected to the device and can adjust all processing characteristics on an individual basis Fully digital circuitry allows implementation of many additional features not possible with analog circuitry can be used in all styles of hearing aids and is the most flexible for example digital hearing aids can be programmed to amplify certain frequencies more than others and can provide better sound quality than analog hearing aids Fully digital hearing aids can be programmed with multiple programs that can be invoked by the wearer or that operate automatically and adaptively These programs reduce acoustic feedback whistling reduce background noise detect and automatically accommodate different listening environments loud vs soft speech vs music quiet vs noisy etc control additional components such as multiple microphones to improve spatial hearing transpose frequencies shift high frequencies that a wearer may not hear to lower frequency regions where hearing may be better and implement many other features Fully digital circuitry also allows control over wireless transmission capability for both the audio and the control circuitry Control signals in a hearing aid on one ear can be sent wirelessly to the control circuitry in the hearing aid on the opposite ear to ensure that the audio in both ears is either matched directly or that the audio contains intentional differences that mimic the differences in normal binaural hearing to preserve spatial hearing ability Audio signals can be sent wirelessly to and from external devices through a separate module often a small device worn like a pendant and commonly called a streamer that allows wireless connection to yet other external devices This capability allows optimal use of mobile telephones personal music players remote microphones and other devices With the addition of speech recognition and internet capability in the mobile phone the wearer has optimal communication ability in many more situations than with hearing aids alone This growing list includes voice activated dialing voice activated software applications either on the phone or on the internet receipt of audio signals from databases on the phone or on internet or audio signals from television sets or from global positioning systems The first practical wearable fully digital hearing aid was invented by Maynard Engebretson Robert E Morley Jr and Gerald R Popelka 50 Their work resulted in US Patent 4 548 082 Hearing aids signal supplying apparatus systems for compensating hearing deficiencies and methods by A Maynard Engebretson Robert E Morley Jr and Gerald R Popelka filed in 1984 This patent formed the basis of all subsequent fully digital hearing aids from all manufacturers including those produced currently 51 The signal processing is performed by the microprocessor in real time and taking into account the individual preferences of the user for example increasing bass for better speech perception in noisy environments or selective amplification of high frequencies for people with reduced sensibility to this range The microprocessor automatically analyzes the nature of the external background noise and adapts the signal processing to the specific conditions as well as to its change for example when the user goes outside from the building 52 In speech enhancement for example using neural networks finds application in hearing aids Problems may arise if these methods filter out emergency sounds such as fire alarms and car horns 53 Difference between digital and analog hearing aids edit Analogue hearing aids make all the sounds picked up by the microphone louder For example speech and ambient noise will be made louder together On the other hand digital hearing aid DHA technology processes the sound using digital technology Before transmitting the sound to the speaker the DHA microprocessor processes the digital signal received by the microphone according to an algorithm This allows certain frequency sounds to be made louder according to the individual user s settings personal audiogram and the DHA can automatically adjust to various environments noisy streets quiet room concert hall etc For users with varying degrees of hearing loss it is difficult to perceive the entire frequency range of external sounds DHAs with multi channel digital processing allow a user to compose the output sound by fitting a whole spectrum of the input signal into it This gives users with limited hearing abilities the opportunity to perceive the whole range of ambient sounds despite the personal difficulties of perception of certain frequencies Moreover even in this narrow range the DHA microprocessor is able to emphasize desired sounds e g speech lowering unwanted loud high etc sounds at the same time According to research 54 DHAs have a number of significant advantages compared to analogue hearing aids Self learning and adaptive adjustment They can implement adaptive selection of amplification parameters and processing Effective acoustic feedback reduction The acoustic whistling common to all hearing aids can be adaptively controlled Effective use of directional microphones Directional microphones can be adaptively controlled Extended frequency range A larger range of frequencies can be implemented with frequency shifting Flexibility in selective amplification They can provide more flexibility in frequency specific amplification to match the individual hearing characteristics of the user Improved connection to other devices Connection to other devices such as smartphones and televisions is possible Noise reduction They can reduce the background noise level to increase user comfort in noisy environments Speech recognition They can distinguish the speech signal from the overall spectrum of sounds which facilitates speech perception These advantages of DHAs were confirmed by a number of studies 55 56 57 relating to the comparative analysis of digital hearing aids of second and first generations and analog hearing aids Difference between digital hearing aids and hearing aid applications edit Smartphones have all the necessary hardware to perform the functions of a digital hearing aid microphone AD converter digital processor DA converter amplifier and speakers External microphone and speakers can also be connected as a special headset The operational principles of hearing aid applications correspond to general operational principles of digital hearing aids the microphone perceives an acoustic signal and converts it to digital form Sound amplification is achieved through hardware and software in accordance with the user s hearing characteristics Then the signal is converted to analog form and received in the headphones by the user The signal is processed in real time Stereo headsets with two speakers can be used which allows separate binaural hearing correction for the left and right ear 31 Unlike digital hearing aids the adjustment of hearing aid applications is an integral part of the application itself 32 Hearing aid applications are adjusted in accordance with the user s audiogram The whole adjustment process is automated so that the user can perform audiometry on their own The hearing correction application has two modes audiometry and correction In the audiometry mode hearing thresholds are measured In the correction mode the signal is processed with respect to the obtained thresholds Hearing aid applications also provide for different computational formulas for the calculation of sound amplification based on the audiometry data These formulas are intended for maximum comfortable speech amplification and best sound intelligibility Hearing aid applications allow the user to save different user profiles for different acoustic environments Thus in contrast to the static settings of digital hearing aids the user can quickly switch between the profiles depending on the acoustic environment One of the most important characteristics of the hearing aid is acoustic feedback In hearing aid applications there is a significant hardware delay so hearing aid applications use a signal processing scheme with the minimum possible algorithmic delay to make it as short as possible 31 Difference between PSAP and digital hearing aids editPersonal sound amplification products PSAP are classified by the FDA as personal sound amplification devices These compact electronic devices are designed for people without hearing loss Unlike hearing aids which the FDA classifies as devices to compensate for hearing impairment 58 the use of PSAP does not require a medical prescription Such devices are used by hunters naturalists for audio observation of animals or birds ordinary people for example to increase the volume of the TV in a quiet room etc PSAP models differ significantly in price and functionality Some devices simply amplify sound Others contain directional microphones equalizers to adjust the audio signal gain and filter noise In modern days some people refer to these devices as OTC hearing aids 59 Evolution of hearing aid applications editThere are audio players designed specifically for the hard of hearing These applications amplify the volume of the reproduced audio signal in accordance with the user s hearing characteristics and act as a music volume amplifier and assistive hearing aid The amplification algorithm works on the frequencies that the user hears worse thus restoring natural hearing perception of the sound of music Just as in hearing aid applications the player adjustment is based on the user s audiogram There are also applications that not only adapt the sound of music but also include some hearing aid functions Such applications include a sound amplification mode in accordance with the user s hearing characteristics as well as a noise suppression mode and a mode allowing the user to hear ambient sound without pausing the music Also some applications allow the hard of hearing to watch video and listen to the radio with comfort The operational principles of these applications are similar to those of hearing aid applications the audio signal is amplified on the frequencies that the user hears worse Hearing aid adaptation editA person using a hearing aid for the first time often cannot make use of all its advantages quickly 60 The structure and characteristics of hearing aids are thoroughly devised by specialists in order to make the adjustment period as simple and quick as possible However despite this a beginning hearing aid user certainly needs time to get used to it 61 The process of adjusting to hearing prostheses consists of the following steps 60 Initial adjustment of the device Fine adjustments Adaptation to the new soundDue to the plasticity of the central nervous system inactive hearing centers in the brain s cortex switch over to processing auditory stimuli in another frequency and intensity The brain starts to perceive sounds amplified by the hearing aid immediately after the initial adjustment however it may not process them correctly right away 60 Feeling the hearing aid in the ear may seem unusual It also takes time to adapt to a new way of hearing The ear has to be gradually adjusted to the new sound The sound may seem unnatural metallic too loud or too quiet A whistling sound may also appear which can be unpleasant 61 Hearing aids do not provide immediate improvement The adjustment period can last from several hours to several months 60 Patients are offered an initial schedule to wear their hearing aid ensuring gradual adaptation to it If the patient wears the hearing aid continually from the beginning the unfamiliar sound may cause a headache and as a result the user may refuse to wear a hearing aid despite the fact that it helps Audiologists often run a quick preparation course for the patients As a rule users have inflated expectations of hearing aids They expect that hearing aids will help them to hear in the same way as before hearing loss but it is not the case Training sessions help hearing aid users to get accustomed to the feeling of new sounds Users are strongly recommended to regularly visit an audiologist including for the purposes of additional hearing aid adjustment 62 Hearing aid applications in contrast to traditional hearing aids allow the implementation of options such as a built in adaptation course The functions of the course may include control of the amount of time spent on learning control over the sequence of exercises daily reminders to do the exercises The goal of the course is to help a user adapt to using a hearing aid application The adaptation course includes a certain number of stages starting from listening to a set of low everyday sounds in a quiet environment getting accustomed to one s own speech and other people s speech getting accustomed to speech among background noise etc 63 History editMain article History of hearing aids nbsp Madame de Meuron with ear trumpetThe first hearing aids were ear trumpets and were created in the 17th century Some of the first hearing aids were external hearing aids External hearing aids directed sounds in front of the ear and blocked all other noises The apparatus would fit behind or in the ear The movement toward modern hearing aids began with the creation of the telephone and the first electric hearing aid the akouphone was created about 1895 by Miller Reese Hutchison By the late 20th century digital hearing aids were commercially available 64 The invention of the carbon microphone transmitters digital signal processing chip or DSP and the development of computer technology helped transform the hearing aid to its present form 65 History of digital aids edit The history of DHA can be divided into three stages The first stage began in the 1960s with the widespread use of digital computers for simulation of audio processing and for the analysis of systems and algorithms 66 The work was conducted with the help of the very large digital computers of that era These efforts were not actual digital hearing aids because the computers were not fast enough for audio processing in real time and their size prevented them from being described as wearable but they allowed successful studies of the various hardware circuits and algorithms for digital processing of audio signals The software package Block of Compiled Diagrams BLODI developed by Kelly Lockbaum and Vysotskiy in 1961 67 allowed simulation of any sound system that could be characterized in the form of a block diagram A special phone was created so that a person with a hearing impairment could listen to the digitally processed signals but not in real time In 1967 Harry Levitt used BLODI to simulate a hearing aid on a digital computer Almost ten years later the second stage began with the creation of the hybrid hearing aid in which the analog components of a conventional hearing aid consisting of amplifiers filters and signal limiting were combined with a separate digital programmable component in a conventional hearing aid case The audio processing remained analog but it was controlled by the digital programmable component The digital component could be programmed by connecting the device to an external computer in the laboratory then disconnected to allow the hybrid device to function as a conventional wearable hearing aid The hybrid device was effective from a practical point of view because of the low power consumption and compact size At that time low power analog amplifier technology was well developed in contrast to the available semiconductor chips able to process digital audio in real time The combination of high performance analog components for real time audio processing and a separate low power digital programmable component only for controlling the analog signal led to the creation of several low power digital programmable components able to implement different types of control A hybrid hearing aid was developed by Etymotic Design A little later Mangold and Lane 66 created a programmable multi channel hybrid hearing aid Graupe 68 with co authors developed a digital programmable component that implemented an adaptive noise filter The third stage began in the early 1980s by a research group at Central Institute for the Deaf headed up by faculty members at Washington University in St Louis MO This group created the first fully digital wearable hearing aid 69 70 They first conceived a complete comprehensive full digital hearing aid then designed and fabricated miniaturized full digital computer chips using custom digital signal processing chips with low power and very large scale integrated VLSI chip technology able to process both the audio signal in real time and the control signals yet able to be powered by a battery and be fully wearable as a full digital wearable hearing aid able to be actually used by individuals with hearing loss in real world environments Engebretson Morley and Popelka were the inventors of the first full digital hearing aid Their work resulted in US Patent 4 548 082 Hearing aids signal supplying apparatus systems for compensating hearing deficiencies and methods by A Maynard Engebretson Robert E Morley Jr and Gerald R Popelka filed in 1984 and issued in 1985 This full digital wearable hearing aid also included many additional features now used in all contemporary full digital hearing aids including a bidirectional interface with an external computer self calibration self adjustment wide bandwidth digital programmability a fitting algorithm based on audibility internal storage of digital programs and fully digital multichannel amplitude compression and output limiting This group created several of these full digital hearing aids and used them for research on hearing impaired people as they wore them in the same manner as conventional hearing aids in real world situations In this first full DHA all stages of sound processing and control were carried out in binary form The external sound was picked up by a microphone positioned in an ITE ear module to take advantage of the acoustic effects of the pinna then converted into binary code digitally processed and digitally controlled in real time then converted back to an analog signal sent to two miniature loudspeakers positioned in the same ITE ear module The ITE module also contained an inward facing microphone to measure the sound actually generated in the ear canal a precursor to separate probe tube measures now routinely used for hearing aid fitting The necessary electronic components including batteries to support this arrangement were situated in a BTE module that could be supplemented with a body worn module These specialized hearing aid chips continued to become smaller increase in computational ability and require even less power Now virtually all commercial hearing aids are fully digital and their digital signal processing capability has significantly increased Very small and very low power specialized digital hearing aid chips are now used in all hearing aids manufactured worldwide Many additional new features also have been added with various on board advanced wireless technology 71 Regulation editCanada edit Hearing aids are Class II 72 regulated medical devices under Canada s Food and Drugs Act Under Health Canada the Medical Devices Directorate MDD regulates the safety quality and effectiveness of hearing aids All hearing aids imported and sold in Canada are subject to a pre market review Post market Health Canada monitors the performance of the hearing aid and any consumer complaints Hearing aid financial assistance is available at both the federal and provincial level Provincial hearing aid assistance and coverage can vary widely depending on the province and territory 73 In Canada a prescription is required to purchase hearing aids Only licensed audiologists Ear Nose and Throat ENT doctors hearing instrument practitioners and audioprothesistes in Quebec can prescribe hearing aids Over the counter OTC hearing aids are currently not available for sale in Canada Canadian taxpayers can claim tax relief for hearing aids as a medical expense 74 Ireland edit Like much of the Irish health care system hearing aid provision is a mixture of public and private Hearing aids are provided by the state to children OAPs definition needed and to people whose income is at or below that of the state pension The Irish state hearing aid provision is extremely poor editorializing people often have to wait for two years for an appointment citation needed It is estimated that the total cost to the state of supplying one hearing aid exceeds 2 000 citation needed Hearing aids are also available privately and there is grant assistance available for insured workers For the fiscal year ending 2016 the grant stands at a maximum of 500 per ear 75 Irish taxpayers can also claim tax relief at the standard rate as hearing aids are recognised as a medical device Hearing aids in the Republic of Ireland are exempt from VAT Hearing aid providers in Ireland mostly belong to the Irish Society of Hearing Aid Audiologists United States edit Ordinary hearing aids are Class I regulated medical devices under Federal Food and Drug Administration FDA rules 76 A 1976 statute explicitly prohibits any state requirement that is different from or in addition to any requirement applicable to regulated medical devices which includes hearing aids which relates to the safety and effectiveness of the device 76 Inconsistent state regulation is preempted under the federal law 77 In the late 1970s the FDA established federal rules governing hearing aid sales 78 and addressed various requests by state authorities for exemptions from federal preemption granting some and denying others 79 The Over the Counter Hearing Aid Act OTC Act was passed under the FDA Reauthorization Act of 2017 creating a class of hearing aids regulated by the FDA available directly to consumers without involvement from a licensed professional This law s provisions are expected to go into effect in 2020 80 In August 2022 the FDA issued a final rule to improve access to hearing aids 81 82 The action establishes a new category of over the counter OTC hearing aids enabling consumers with perceived mild to moderate hearing impairment to purchase hearing aids directly from stores or online retailers without the need for a medical exam prescription or a fitting adjustment by an audiologist 81 The FDA action amends existing rules that apply to prescription hearing aids for consistency with the new OTC category it repeals the conditions for sale for hearing aids and it includes provisions that address some of the effects of the FDA OTC hearing aid regulations on state regulation of hearing aids 81 The FDA also issued the final guidance Regulatory Requirements for Hearing Aid Devices and Personal Sound Amplification Products PSAPs to clarify the differences between hearing aids which are medical devices and PSAPs consumer products that help people with normal hearing amplify sounds 81 83 Cost edit nbsp Hearing aid shop Dublin IrelandSeveral industrialized countries supply free or heavily discounted hearing aids through their publicly funded health care system Australia edit The Australian Department of Health and Ageing provides eligible Australian citizens and residents with a basic hearing aid free of charge though recipients can pay a top up charge if they wish to upgrade to a hearing aid with more or better features Maintenance of these hearing aids and a regular supply of batteries is also provided on payment of a small annual maintenance fee 84 Canada edit In Canada health care is a responsibility of the provinces In the province of Ontario the price of hearing aids is partially reimbursed through the Assistive Devices Program of the Ministry of Health and Long Term care up to 500 for each hearing aid Like eye appointments audiological appointments are no longer covered through the provincial public health plan Audiometric testing can still easily be obtained often free of charge in private sector hearing aid clinics and some ear nose and throat doctors offices Hearing aids may be covered to some extent by private insurance or in some cases through government programs such as Veterans Affairs Canada or Workplace Safety amp Insurance Board Iceland edit Social Insurance pays a one time fee of ISK 30 000 for any kind of hearing aid However the rules are complicated editorializing and require that both ears have significant hearing loss in order to qualify for reimbursement BTE hearing aids range from ISK 60 000 to ISK 300 000 85 India edit In India hearing aids of all kinds are easily available Under central and state government health services the poor can often avail themselves of free hearing devices However market prices vary for others and can range from Rs 10 000 to Rs 275 000 per ear United Kingdom edit From 2000 to 2005 the Department of Health worked with Action on Hearing Loss then called RNID to improve the quality of NHS hearing aids so every NHS audiology department in England was fitting digital hearing aids by March 2005 By 2003 over 175 000 NHS digital hearing aids had been fitted to 125 000 people Private companies were recruited to enhance the capacity and two were appointed David Ormerod Hearing Centres partly owned by Alliance Boots and Ultravox Group a subsidiary of Amplifon 86 Within the UK the NHS provides digital BTE hearing aids to NHS patients on long term loan free of charge Other than BAHAs bone anchored hearing aid or cochlear implants where specifically required BTEs are usually the only style available Private purchases may be necessary if a user desires a different style Batteries are free 87 In 2014 the Clinical Commissioning Group in North Staffordshire considered proposals to end provision of free hearing aids for adults with mild to moderate age related hearing loss which currently cost them 1 2m a year Action on Hearing Loss mobilised a campaign against the proposal 88 In June 2018 the National Institute for Health and Care Excellence produced new guidance saying that hearing aids should be offered at the first opportunity when hearing loss affects the individual s ability to hear and communicate rather than waiting for arbitrary thresholds of hearing loss to be reached 89 United States edit Most private healthcare providers in the United States do not provide coverage for hearing aids so all costs are usually borne by the recipient The cost for a single hearing aid can vary between 500 and 6 000 or more depending on the level of technology and whether the clinician bundles fitting fees into the cost of the hearing aid Though if an adult has hearing loss which substantially limits major life activities some state run vocational rehabilitation programs can provide upwards of full financial assistance Severe and profound hearing loss often falls within the substantially limiting category 90 Less expensive hearing aids can be found on the internet or mail order catalogs but most in the under 200 range tend to amplify the low frequencies of background noise making it harder to hear the human voice 91 92 Military veterans receiving VA medical care are eligible for hearing aids based on medical need The Veterans Administration pays the full cost of testing and hearing aids to qualified military veterans Major VA medical facilities provide complete diagnostic and audiology services citation needed The cost of hearing aids is a tax deductible medical expense for those who itemize medical deductions 93 Research involving more than 40 000 US households showed a convincing correlation between the degree of hearing loss and the reduction of personal income According to the same research hearing aids were shown to mitigate the impact of income loss by 90 100 for those with milder hearing losses and from 65 77 for those with severe to moderate hearing loss 94 Batteries editWhile there are some instances that a hearing aid uses a rechargeable battery or a long life disposable battery the majority of modern hearing aids use one of five standard button cell zinc air batteries Older hearing aids often used mercury battery cells but these cells have become banned in most countries today Modern hearing aid button cell types are typically referred to by their common number name or the color of their packaging They are typically loaded into the hearing aid via a rotating battery door with the flat side case as the positive terminal cathode and the rounded side as the negative terminal anode These batteries all operate from 1 35 to 1 45 volts The type of battery a specific hearing aid utilizes depends on the physical size allowable and the desired lifetime of the battery which is in turn determined by the power draw of the hearing aid device Typical battery lifetimes run between 1 and 14 days assuming 16 hour days Hearing Aid Battery Types Type Color Code Dimensions Diameter Height Common Uses Standard Names Misc Names675 11 6 mm 5 4 mm High Power BTEs Cochlear implants IEC PR44 ANSI 7003ZD 675 675A 675AE 675AP 675CA 675CP 675HP 675HPX 675 Implant Plus 675P HP 675PA 675SA 675SP A675 A675P AC675 AC675E AC675E EZ AC675EZ AC 675E AP675 B675PA B6754 B900PA C675 DA675 DA675H DA675H N DA675N DA675X H675AE L675ZA ME9Z P675 P675i PR44 PR44P PR675 PR675H PR675P PR 675PA PZ675 PZA675 R675ZA S675A V675 V675A V675AT VT675 XL675 Z675PX ZA675 ZA675HP13 7 9 mm 5 4 mm BTEs ITEs IEC PR48 ANSI 7000ZD 13 13A 13AE 13AP 13HP 13HPX 13P 13PA 13SA 13ZA A13 AC13 AC13E AC13E EZ AC13EZ AC 13E AP13 B13BA B0134 B26PA CP48 DA13 DA13H DA13H N DA13N DA13X E13E L13ZA ME8Z P13 PR13 PR13H PR 13PA PZ13 PZA13 R13ZA S13A V13A VT13 V13AT W13ZA XL13 ZA13312 7 9 mm 3 6 mm miniBTEs RICs ITCs IEC PR41 ANSI 7002ZD 312 312A 312AE 312AP 312HP 312HPX 312P 312PA 312SA 312ZA AC312 AC312E AC312E EZ AC312EZ AC 312E AP312 B312BA B3124 B347PA CP41 DA312 DA312H DA312H N DA312N DA312X E312E H312AE L312ZA ME7Z P312 PR312 PR312H PR 312PA PZ312 PZA312 R312ZA S312A V312A V312AT VT312 W312ZA XL312 ZA31210 5 8 mm 3 6 mm CICs RICs IEC PR70 ANSI 7005ZD 10 10A 10AE 10AP 10DS 10HP 10HPX 10SA 10UP 20PA 230 230E 230EZ 230HPX AC10 AC10EZ AC10 230 AC10 230E AC10 230EZ AC230 AC230E AC230E EZ AC230EZ AC 230E AP10 B0104 B20BA B20PA CP35 DA10 DA10H DA10H N DA10N DA230 DA230 10 L10ZA ME10Z P10 PR10 PR10H PR230H PR536 PR 10PA PR 230PA PZA230 R10ZA S10A V10 VT10 V10AT V10HP V230AT W10ZA XL10 ZA105 5 8 mm 2 1 mm CICs IEC PR63 ANSI 7012ZD 5A 5AE 5HPX 5SA AC5 AC5E AP5 B7PA CP63 CP521 L5ZA ME5Z P5 PR5H PR 5PA PR521 R5ZA S5A V5AT VT5 XL5 ZA5References edit Bentler RA Duve MR December 2000 Comparison of hearing aids over the 20th century Ear and Hearing 21 6 625 639 doi 10 1097 00003446 200012000 00009 PMID 11132788 S2CID 46218426 Ear Horn Q amp A Archived from the original on 24 July 2008 Retrieved 6 December 2007 Kochkin S January 2010 MarkeTrak VIII Consumer satisfaction with hearing aids is slowly increasing The Hearing Journal 63 1 19 20 doi 10 1097 01 HJ 0000366912 40173 76 S2CID 73880581 Cox RM Johnson JA Xu J July 2016 Impact of Hearing Aid Technology on Outcomes in Daily Life I the Patients Perspective Ear and Hearing 37 4 e224 37 doi 10 1097 AUD 0000000000000277 PMC 4925253 PMID 26881981 The Best Over the Counter Hearing Aids and Other Hearing Solutions The New York Times Retrieved 5 December 2022 J Moore Brian C 2007 Cochlear hearing loss physiological psychological and technical issues 2nd ed Chichester John Wiley amp Sons ISBN 978 0 470 51633 1 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March 2020 a b c d FDA Finalizes Historic Rule Enabling Access to Over the Counter Hearing Aids for Millions of Americans U S Food and Drug Administration FDA 16 August 2022 Archived from the original on 16 August 2022 Retrieved 16 August 2022 nbsp This article incorporates text from this source which is in the public domain Public Inspection Medical Devices Ear Nose and Throat Devices Establishing Over the Counter Hearing Aids Federal Register U S Food and Drug Administration FDA 16 August 2022 Archived from the original on 16 August 2022 Retrieved 16 August 2022 nbsp This article incorporates text from this source which is in the public domain Regulatory Requirements for Hearing Aids and PSAPs Guidance U S Food and Drug Administration FDA 12 August 2022 Archived from the original on 16 August 2022 Retrieved 16 August 2022 nbsp This article incorporates text from this source which is in the public domain Understanding the Australian Government Hearing Services Program Archived from the original on 9 September 2007 Retrieved 4 December 2007 Social Insurance Administration Iceland Accessed 30 November 2007 Archived 16 February 2008 at the Wayback Machine Loud and clear Health Service Journal 18 December 2003 Archived from the original on 23 October 2014 Retrieved 17 October 2014 NHS hearing aid service fact sheet Accessed 26 November 2007 Archived 2 October 2010 at the Wayback Machine Hearing aid charging opposed in feedback exercise Health Service Journal 23 September 2014 Archived from the original on 9 October 2014 Retrieved 17 October 2014 https www nice org uk guidance ng98 evidence full guideline pdf 4852693117 Archived 1 October 2020 at the Wayback Machine bare URL PDF Questions and Answers about Deafness and Hearing Impairments in the Workplace and the Americans with Disabilities Act U S Equal Employment Opportunity Commission Archived from the original on 4 March 2016 Retrieved 26 November 2007 Mahany Barbara 9 March 2011 Now Hear This Chicago Tribune Archived from the original on 15 June 2013 Romano Tricia 22 October 2012 The Hunt for an Affordable Hearing Aid Well New York Times Archived from the original on 25 February 2015 Topic 502 Medical and Dental Expenses Internal Revenue Service Archived from the original on 3 July 2017 Retrieved 26 November 2007 Kochkin Sergei October 2010 MarkeTrak VIII The efficacy of hearing aids in achieving compensation equity in the workplace The Hearing Journal 63 10 19 24 26 28 doi 10 1097 01 HJ 0000389923 80044 e6 S2CID 52230904 Further reading editChen CH Huang CY Cheng HL Lin HH Chu YC Chang CY et al April 2022 Comparison of personal sound amplification products and conventional hearing aids for patients with hearing loss A systematic review with meta analysis eClinicalMedicine 46 101378 doi 10 1016 j eclinm 2022 101378 PMC 9006672 PMID 35434580 Mamo SK Reed NS Nieman CL Oh ES Lin FR March 2016 Personal Sound Amplifiers for Adults with Hearing Loss The American Journal of Medicine 129 3 245 50 doi 10 1016 j amjmed 2015 09 014 PMC 4755807 PMID 26498713 External links edit nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to Hearing aids Hearing Aids National Institutes of Health NIH Hearing Aids and Personal Sound Amplification Products What to Know U S Food and Drug Administration FDA World Hearing Day World Health Organization Deafness in Disguise Concealed Hearing Devices of the 19th and 20th CenturiesPortals nbsp Medicine nbsp Technology Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Hearing aid amp oldid 1187315399, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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