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Farming Forward
Parenting and Children on the Farm
Hearing impairments
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<blockquote data-quote="milkloss" data-source="post: 8905944" data-attributes="member: 56"><p>Our girl (8) has had bilateral low frequency hearing loss since we were able to recognise it and get tested. It doesn’t affect her much day to day apart from some difficulty hearing teachers and in noisy situations. Following an extensive test (approx 2 hectares of igl2 in cost!) it was suggested she had some help</p><p></p><p>her cochlear works 100% and the assumption is that the bones in her ear are malfunctioning most likely. This means bone induction (not implants) should work well. There are systems that work with the teacher wearing a Bluetooth mic to enable her to hear the teacher better and still leave her ears to function for peripheral sound.</p><p></p><p>does anyone have experience?</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="milkloss, post: 8905944, member: 56"] Our girl (8) has had bilateral low frequency hearing loss since we were able to recognise it and get tested. It doesn’t affect her much day to day apart from some difficulty hearing teachers and in noisy situations. Following an extensive test (approx 2 hectares of igl2 in cost!) it was suggested she had some help her cochlear works 100% and the assumption is that the bones in her ear are malfunctioning most likely. This means bone induction (not implants) should work well. There are systems that work with the teacher wearing a Bluetooth mic to enable her to hear the teacher better and still leave her ears to function for peripheral sound. does anyone have experience? [/QUOTE]
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