Cochlear Implant

By Rey Vetangelo


There are many professional settings in which you may find yourself working with elderly clients. When you are working with a lot of elderly clients, you should understand the importance of being sensitive to hearing loss and reacting well to your clients hearing loss.

First, you should understand that volume does not necessarily mean clarity. There are some people that only start to talk louder when they realize that they are working with someone that is struggling to hear and understand what they are saying in their conversations.

This culture is particularly important for individuals who were born deaf, or became deaf at a young age. For individuals who lose their hearing later in life, this type of understanding is more difficult to achieve because they spent most of their lives in a very different community with different values and understandings.

As decreased mobility is often one of the major limitations that the elderly suffer from, alterations to the home that help improve the owner's mobility can begin to be considered early on. Such modifications as stair climbers that transport people up and down stairs or increasing the width of doorways in the home to allow for wheelchairs or motorized scooters to pass through are two modifications that can instantly help with mobility.

Hearing aids were some of the earliest inventions in regard to a person's hearing. Initially these aids were as simple as a funnel that directed sound into the inner ear, and eventually they improved to be an electronic aid, small enough to be concealed in the human ear. And after hearing aids were improved, the cochlear implant was invented to help individuals to hear.

Second, you should be sure that you take your time while you are talking. There are a lot of people that rush through their conversations on a professional level because they have a lot of things to do and they want to get their clients in and out efficiently.

Although this may be a great way to save your time and save your clients time, when you are dealing with a client that has hearing loss you will need to slow it down. Make sure that you speak in short and simple sentences and you are not rushing what you are saying.

Third, you should be familiar with how a captioned telephone works. Your client may be using a captioned telephone and you want to make sure that you are speaking in a manner that allows this service to translate what you are saying for your client.

Other useful tools for deaf individuals include captioning telephones and captioned call service. With these products and services, deaf individuals can use phones and make calls without the need for an interpreter. Either way, this is a wonderful tool.




About the Author:



0 comments:

Post a Comment