Dr. Hosford-Dunn began blogging in her audiology private practice in Tucson, AZ. Back in 2009, blogging was a new and interesting way to quickly share and improve information with colleagues, consumers, and patients. As blogging gained attention, she had the opportunity to serve as chief editor of a multi-author blog for an hearing industry publication. The format was fun and successful. It rapidly evolved into Hearing Health & Technology Matters! (HHTM), an independent blogsite that she founded in partnership with other colleagues in 2011. Since its inception, Dr. Hosford-Dunn has served as HHTM’s first Editor-in-Chief, then Managing Editor, and now is CFO of the organization. After graduating with a BA and MA in Communication Disorders from New Mexico State, she completed a PhD in Hearing Sciences at Stanford and did post-docs at Max Planck Institute (Germany) and Eaton-Peabody Auditory Physiology Lab (Boston). Post-education, she directed the Stanford University Audiology Clinic; developed multi-office private practices in Arizona; authored/edited numerous text books, chapters, journals, and articles; and taught Marketing, Practice Management, Hearing Science, Auditory Electrophysiology, and Amplification in a variety of academic settings. Dr. Hosford-Dunn participates in life long learning by writing weekly posts and by embracing sequential learning endeavors. She spent a year training with the Gemological Institute of America, gaining certification as a Graduate Gemologist (GIA). She graduated with a B.A. in Economics and Psychology from the University of Arizona in 2013. Currently — and probably forever — she studies the Spanish language.
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Jan. 31, 2012

Back to the Future Part II: New Competitors Bring New Pressures

Holly Hosford-Dunn
Back to the Future posts consider hearing healthcare predictions of Lars Kolind (Oticon) in the late 1990s, published in the final chapter{{1}}[[1]]Jerger JJ, Skafte MD, Kolind L. The future of audiology practice management.  Chapter 21. In Hosford-Dunn H, Roeser R, & Valente, M. (2000). Audiology: Practice Management (1st Ed). NY:  Thieme. pp 481-490.[[1]] of Audiology: Practice Management (1st Ed, 2000).   Post #1
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Jan. 24, 2012

Aaargh!! Time for Ruthless Publishers to Walk the Plank

Holly Hosford-Dunn
Who are the most ruthless capitalists in the Western world?”  Bankers? Oil companies?  Health insurers?  None of the above; they are actually academic publishers… their monopolistic practices make Walmart look like a corner shop and Rupert Murdoch a socialist.  {{1}}[[1]] George Monbiot writing in The Guardian, quoted in The Robber Barons of Academia,  The Week, 3 Sept 2011.[[1]] Thus speaks British social activist
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Jan. 17, 2012

Back to the Future, Part I: Are We Retailers?

Holly Hosford-Dunn
Audiology: Practice Management was published in 2000 as part of an Audiology book “trilogy” edited by Ross Roeser, Mike Valente and myself.  In that first edition, we egregiously took on the ambitious task of predicting the future of practice management. At least we were modest enough to prevail upon other, better positioned thinkers to make the predictions.{{1}}[[1]]Jerger JJ, Skafte MD, Kolind
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Jan. 10, 2012

If I’d met him on eHarmony, I wouldn’t have called him back

Holly Hosford-Dunn
Economics is all about  individuals, companies, nations parlaying their limited resources into trades that maximize outcomes. At least they think or hope that their trades will have that effect. We’ve talked about some of the underlying concepts in previous posts: Utility is a person’s internal measures of perceived benefit from acquiring something; rationale behavior is needed to make the best trades
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Jan. 03, 2012

Oh James, What’s a Centimillionaire?: 2001 Insider Trading Wrap-Up

Holly Hosford-Dunn
“The future is already here; it’s just not evenly distributed.”{{1}}[[1]]William Gibson, science fiction author[[1]] 2011 was a BIG year for insider trading, centimillionaires{{2}}[[2]]At least $100 million[[2]], wire-taps, and hidden microphones.  Time to call in James Bond. Directors of Wall Street firms connived with hedge fund tycoons who were detained as flight risks and slammed with 11 year prison sentences.  But, the intrigue