LynJ
Mouseketeer
- Joined
- Jun 23, 2014
- Messages
- 372
We were at Disney in December. Kiddo had a fabulous time. Undiagnosed hearing loss at the time.
We get back in January and were informed that she failed her school hearing test. After a battery of tests, she has mod-severe unilateral hearing loss in high pitches in one ear. Lower pitches are on the low end of normal. Other ear is perfectly fine.
She will likely be getting a hearing aid to help, especially in school and background noise situations. At the moment, she has adapted extremely well (to the point that even her teacher was stunned to find out about the hearing loss). She can hear very well in quiet environments, but background noise and sound location are a problem.
We're returning in December, and she will likely have a hearing aid at that time. Since this will be a new level of background noise (with what will be a fairly new hearing aid), is there anything we should particularly watch out for? We don't want her to be overwhelmed, but at the same time we don't want her not wearing her hearing aid and missing out on things.
(And yes, I'll explore this with the audiologist once she gets a hearing aid and starts adapting to it, but I thought I'd feel out the Disboards to see if you guys have any experience/advice with this.)
We get back in January and were informed that she failed her school hearing test. After a battery of tests, she has mod-severe unilateral hearing loss in high pitches in one ear. Lower pitches are on the low end of normal. Other ear is perfectly fine.
She will likely be getting a hearing aid to help, especially in school and background noise situations. At the moment, she has adapted extremely well (to the point that even her teacher was stunned to find out about the hearing loss). She can hear very well in quiet environments, but background noise and sound location are a problem.
We're returning in December, and she will likely have a hearing aid at that time. Since this will be a new level of background noise (with what will be a fairly new hearing aid), is there anything we should particularly watch out for? We don't want her to be overwhelmed, but at the same time we don't want her not wearing her hearing aid and missing out on things.
(And yes, I'll explore this with the audiologist once she gets a hearing aid and starts adapting to it, but I thought I'd feel out the Disboards to see if you guys have any experience/advice with this.)