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Do I Need ONE or TWO Hearing Aids?
Basically, if you have two ears with hearing loss that could benefit from hearing
aids, you need two hearing aids. It is important to realize there are no "normal" animals
born with only one ear. Simply stated, you have two ears because you need two ears. If we
try to amplify sound in only one ear, you cannot expect to do very well. Even the best
hearing aid will sound "flat" or "dull" when worn in only one ear.
Assuming you have two ears that hear about the same, you can do a little
experiment at home to better understand how important binaural hearing is:
First, gently close just one ear, by simply pressing the little fleshy part in the front of your ear
canal (the tragus) into your ear canal -- a little. Do not apply pressure, do not hurt yourself.
Just close the ear canal to eliminate sound from entering the ear. The idea is to close that ear
for about ten minutes while you watch TV or listen to the radio, or speak with your spouse. Then,
after a full ten minutes, remove your finger. What an amazing difference!
There are many advantages associated with binaural (two ear)
listening and importantly, there are problems associated with
wearing only one hearing aid -- if you are indeed a candidate for binaural amplification.
Localization (knowing where the sound came from) is only possible with two ears,
and just about impossible with one ear. Localization is not just a sound quality
issue; it may also be a safety issue. Think about how important it is to know where
warning and safety sounds (sirens, screams, babies crying, etc) are coming from.
Using both ears together also impacts how well you hear in noise because binaural
hearing permits you to selectively attend to the desired signal, while "squelching"
or paying less attention to undesired sounds such as background noise.
Binaural hearing allows a quality of "spaciousness" or
"high fidelity" to sounds, which cannot occur with monaural
(one ear) listening. Understanding speech clearly, particularly
in challenging and noisy situations, is easier while using both
ears. Additionally, using two hearing aids allows people to speak
with you from either side of your head – not just your "good" side!
People cannot hear well using only one ear. There are studies in the research
literature that show that children with one normal ear and one "deaf" ear are
ten times more likely to repeat a grade as compared to children with two normally hearing ears.
Additionally, we know that if you have two ears with hearing impairment, and you wear only one
hearing aid, the unaided ear is likely to lose word recognition ability more quickly than the ear
wearing the hearing aid.
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