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Adapting to New Hearing Aids

Adapting to new hearing aids takes time. Some people need a day or two to learn about and adjust to their hearing aids, most people need a few weeks and others may need a few months.
I usually recommend...

Wear them for a few hours the first day and add an hour a day the following day, and the next, and the next, until you are wearing them most of the day. Adapting to your hearing aids is a gradual process. Do not try to set an endurance record!

I recommend that you interact with people familiar to you during your first days with new hearing aids. Start in a favorable listening environment (such as one-on-one conversations in quiet) and work towards more difficult listening situations. Let your friends and family know you’re using your new hearing aids.

Please do NOT wear them to a party or restaurant during the first few weeks, thinking "this will be a good test!" It will absolutely not be a good test – it will be very difficult! You should not wear hearing aids in noise until you are very accustomed to them!


Helpful Steps to Learning to Use a Hearing Aid:

1. At first, wear the hearing aids in your own home environment.

2. Wear them only as long as you are comfortable wearing them.

3. It is best to practice using them while conversing with just one other person.

4. Do not strain to catch every word, even people with normal hearing do not hear every word!

5. Do not be discouraged by background noise.

6. You will do better by practicing locating the source of the sound by listening only.

7. Increase your tolerance for loud sounds SLOWLY.

8. Practice learning to discriminate different speech sounds.

9. Good results are gained by listening to something read aloud. "Books on tape" are available at your library.

10. Gradually extend the number of persons with whom you speak.

11. Gradually increase the number of situations in which you use your hearing aids.

12. Take part in an organized course of aural rehabilitation, see your audiologist to learn about these courses.

Here's another view about adapting to new hearing aids....

Hearing aids work EXTREMELY well when fitted and adjusted properly. They amplify Speech! The left and right hearing aids will probably not fit exactly the same and they probably won’t sound exactly the same because your ears are not exactly the same.

You might find you like one better than the other. They should be comfortable with respect to physical fit and sound quality. Your audiologist will make sure of that. Then adapting to your hearing instruments will be assured.

They do not restore normal hearing and are not as good as normal hearing. You will be aware of hearing aids in your ears. Until you adapt to it, your voice will sound "funny" when you wear them. They should not to be worn in extremely noisy environments.

Some hearing aids have features that make noisy environments more tolerable; however, they cannot completely eliminate background noise. Background noise is a real bother for many people. You should speak with your hearing healthcare professional about options that do significantly reduce background noise, such as directional microphones, and FM systems. These special options make adapting to your hearing aids easier for many people.

This information courtesy of healthyhearing.com.


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