Open Fit Hearing Aids

A wide range of styles and application are available for hearing aid users today and

the best hearing aids would be widely debatable. New sytyles and models are coming

on to the market frequently. Learn more about your choices now. You should conduct

some research to determine the best hearing aids for you.

But if your hearing has deteriorated to the point where you cannot hear the doorbell and the telephone ringing, or the teapot in the kitchen whistling, you should consult an audiologist to determine whether or not you are a candidate for a hearing aid.

If you are ready for a hearing aid, dont despair. Hearing aids are no longer the bulky, uncomfortable and very obvious devices you might remember having seen in your youth; the 2005 introduction of open fit hearing aids changed that forever.

Open fit hearing aids are tiny devices which rest outside and behind the ear, with no ear canal-occluding earmold. Open fit hearing aids instead have extremely thin, nearly invisible ’sound tubes’ and are so lightweight that their users often forget they are wearing them.

Open fit hearing aids are available in two designs; the speaker-in-ear, or SIE models, and the acoustic tube models. The tube model open fit hearing aids have all their electronics housed in the small plastic shell which lodges behind the users ear. Sound first gets processed in the behind-the-ear casing, and then moves along the acoustic tube and enters the ear canal.

The SIE open fit hearing aid, however, takes its speaker out of the plastic shell and moves it to the end of the thin tube, where there is a sound tip. SIE open fit hearing aids, therefore, do not need as much gain directly at ear level to provide the same amount of sound output within the ear canal. This makes them more suitable for a broader range of hearing impairment than the acoustic tube models, which work best with high frequency hearing loss.

Open ear hearing aids are available with directional microphones, which allow those wearers in nosy environments to point them directly at a speaker for better sound clarity. Their biggest drawback is that they are automatic, and do not have any adjustable volume control.

If you are at the age where you think you high frequency hearings not quite what it once was, make an appointment with an audiologist to determine the degree and cause of your hearing loss. And if you are in need of hearing aids, open fit hearing aids may be a very pleasant surprise!

David Faulkner
You can also find more info on digital hearing aids and programmable analog hearing. FirstHearingAids.com is a comprehensive resource for people suffering from hearing loss to get information on hearing aid options, prices and maintenance.

One Response to “Open Fit Hearing Aids”

  1. David,

    Thank you for all of the objective information. These decisions are difficult ones for us to make and I really appreciate having your site as a resource. For those in the Tampa Bay area, I have found this site to be informative also: http://hearinganddizziness.com/

    Thans again David and best of luck to others with hearing loss.

    Sincerely,
    Ed

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