Effects Of Hearing Loss

4 Steps to Fight the Silent Epidemic: Hearing Loss
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Are you having to turn your television’s volume higher and higher to hear it over the years? Or, have you started speaking to your ageing parents louder and louder for them to understand what you’re saying? Unfortunately, we tend not to notice these little things, but they are signs of a silent and crippling epidemic:

How to Know if It’s Time to Visit an Audiologist
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Some people hesitate to see a Hearing Care Professional even if they have hearing problems. Some even deny the problem exists and that could be even more costly. For instance, leaving hearing loss untreated could lead to permanent long-term damage, or lead to other health concerns such as Alzheimer’s, depression and dementia. That is why

Beware! Here’s How Hearing Loss Can Affect Brain Development In Kids!
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We don’t actually hear with our ears – we hear with our brain. Our ears are the “doorways” for sound. Our brain tells us what we are hearing and gives those sounds meaning, as in speech. Imagine the consequences of hearing loss on children, who are still not entirely acquainted with the intricacies of language!

10 Famous Personalities Who Overcame Hearing Loss!
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Unlike the world, hearing loss doesn’t discriminate — by age, gender, race, fame or wealth. According to the World Health Organization (WHO) 2021 World Report on Hearing, 1.16 billion of the 1.50 billion people who have hearing loss have mild severity. We see there are a lot of famous personalities and Indian celebrities with hearing

6 Common Myths about Hearing Loss – Debunked!
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Hearing loss comes with many misconceptions. Fear and lack of knowledge prevent many people from getting the hearing help they need. But the fact of the matter is that hearing loss if left untreated, can wreak havoc in an individual’s personal and professional life. For a person suffering from hearing loss, nothing could be more

7 Reasons Why Hearing Health Is As Important As Overall Health
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It’s not uncommon to see individuals afflicted with hearing loss to put off their problems with an ‘it’s not that bad’ or ‘it seems to come and go’. The social stigma of being seen wearing a hearing aid and being labelled ‘deaf’ or ‘old’ can lead to avoiding the problem altogether. It is true that