Wayne's World

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Jan. 12, 2015

The Disappearing Hearing Aid Volume Control

Wayne Staab
First Rule of Thumb A patient will prefer the hearing aid that provides amplification at the level they desire. This is axiomatic regardless of any acoustic frequency response modifications that might be available.   This hearing aid user listening level acceptance may or may not be the level that the fitter or programming formula designates. Even if they agree, it
Featured image for “Knee, Typewriter, and Hearing Aid”
Jan. 06, 2015

Knee, Typewriter, and Hearing Aid

Wayne Staab
Prior to the holidays, this post offered a suggestion that a much larger market exists for amplification products (aka hearing aids) if they are viewed as a consumer product rather than as a product identified only with hearing loss. The number of “consumers” greatly exceeds the number of “patients” – normally, a critical factor in sales. For those who wish
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Dec. 29, 2014

Hearing Aid Protective Practices May Be Underutilized

Wayne Staab
This week’s post reports on the results of a short, informal survey conducted by Lana M. Joseph, M.S. that sought to determine, in part, some options hearing aid offices offer to manage security and protection for their patients’ hearing aids.  She received her Master’s degree in Health Care Management from the University of New Orleans.  She realizes that in no way is
Dec. 23, 2014

Readers’ Choice 2014: Hearing but Not Understanding

Wayne Staab
  Dear Readers: During this holiday season, the editors at Hearing Health & Technology Matters (HHTM) are taking some time off. However, we are not leaving you without anything to read on our blog this week. Instead, we are publishing a special holiday edition filled with what we call our Readers’ Choices. HHTM has had more than half a million
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Dec. 15, 2014

Call Them Customers

Wayne Staab
Call Them Customers My last three posts may have caused some anxiety among professional hearing aid dispensers, especially when they read the obituary of the hearing aid.  Some readers of this post may think these comments are extreme.  I ask readers to read this with their minds, not their emotions or from biased perspectives. This post intends to focus on the
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Dec. 09, 2014

Hearing Aid Market Penetration

Wayne Staab
Is There a Real Percentage Change in Hearing Aid Market Penetration rates?   This week’s post continues a discussion of hearing aid market penetration.  This was not the intended topic, but after reading last week’s presentation, some readers challenged Figure 1 of that post, even though the overall message was not challenged – that market penetration is not as good as
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Dec. 01, 2014

Hearing Aid Obituary – Continued

Wayne Staab
Is the problem of limited hearing aid usage that of the consumer or the system?   Last week’s post reported on the death of the hearing aid as we have known the device from the past. The hearing aid obituary post suggested that, in spite of its passing, its legacy could be expected to live and actually expand via a
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Nov. 25, 2014

Hearing Aid Obituary

Wayne Staab
Note: This Obituary is written somewhat with tongue in cheek, but history tells us to beware of what we do not know or expect. This is the first of a series of posts on “the Hearing Aid Obituary.” The series is a theoretical treatise attempting to project amplification (actually listening) directions moving forward. Obituary Some time around 2014, the hearing
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Nov. 18, 2014

Hearing Loss: Aging, Medication, Cognition, Treatment

Wayne Staab
ADA: A Bad Day at Black Rock or A Good Day at Red Rock? Many years ago Spencer Tracy starred in a film as Macreedy, a one-armed man who came by train to the sparsely populated and isolated desert town of Black Rock in the Southwest United States. It was the first time in four years that the train had stopped.
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Nov. 11, 2014

Before the Audiogram

Wayne Staab
Audiogram, AW’-dee-oh-gram”, (n). A record of the threshold of sensitivity of hearing measured at several different (usually discrete) frequencies{{1}}[[1]]Modified slightly from Delk, J.H. Comprehensive Dictionary of Audiology, P 35, 1973, The Hearing Aid Journal, Sioux City, IA[[1]]. Strange as it may seem to many currently measuring and recording hearing results, the audiogram did not always portray hearing sensitivity as logically