Happy, Healthy, and Wealthy with Hearing Aids

Happy, Healthy, and Wealthy with Hearing Aids

In Hearing Aids, Hearing Health, Hearing Loss by Dr. Robert Hooper Au.D.

Having your hearing tested later in life is an important part of maintaining your overall health. It has been found that people lead happier, healthier, and wealthier lives with a better quality of life when disabling hearing loss is treated with hearing aids, cochlear implants, or other hearing-assistive devices by a hearing health care professional.

People who wear hearing aids tend to earn more than those with hearing loss who do not wear them. It has been found that the differential between the two groups increases with the severity of the hearing loss and that unemployment rates for non-users are twice that of hearing aid users. Considerable evidence points to the fact that people with hearing loss earn significantly less than people with normal hearing.

The extensive scientific report, “Hearing Loss – Numbers and Costs,” by Professor Emerita Bridget Shield, Brunel University in London with the assistance of Professor Mark Atherton, Brunel University, London, outlines the benefits of maintaining your hearing health and, conversely, the societal cost of untreated hearing loss.

The Benefits of Hearing Aids

People who use hearing aids report that their quality of life has improved and that hearing aids, or other hearing solutions like cochlear implants, have had a positive effect on their overall health. They report experiencing less physical and mental exhaustion, better sleep, better memory, and less depression than people who do not utilize hearing solutions to combat their hearing loss. On a fundamental level, they help with communication between friends and family and in the workplace.

We may not immediately think about the role of the brain in our hearing ability, but it’s integral to not only hearing, but also comprehension and speech. The inner ear has hair cells that are responsible for converting the noise gathered by the outer ear into electrical signals, which travel along an auditory nerve to the brain. Every one of the hair cells is responsible for converting a pitch or frequency. They are also irreparable if they become damaged or die, so the brain must work harder to process information it is receiving due to the loss of that function. Hearing aids can prevent the mental fatigue that comes with untreated hearing loss.

Various Costs of Untreated Hearing Loss

There is substantial evidence that people with untreated hearing loss earn significantly less, on average, than their counterparts with normal hearing, according to the Shield and Atherton report. They often hold more menial jobs or retire earlier than people with normal hearing ability. People with untreated hearing loss are also twice as likely to experience higher unemployment rates.

Untreated hearing loss can lead to a loss of productivity, economic losses due to a poorer quality of life, and a strain on social benefits like unemployment and pensions. Increased health care costs are another result as comorbidities associated with untreated hearing loss, such as cognitive decline and depression, require more frequent hospital visits.

Untreated hearing loss can have a great effect on your quality of life, too. The more severe the hearing loss, the greater the loss in quality of life you are likely to experience. The report shows the correlation between the two and also demonstrates that hearing loss has more of an impact on quality of life than many other chronic conditions, like blindness and other vision impairments, Alzheimer’s, and dementia.

Many negative physical, mental, and social implications often accompany untreated hearing loss. It can lead to social isolation and loneliness, which can lead to depression. It can have negative effects on family and personal relationships: strained conversations, impatience and frustration with repetition, eventual withdrawal. Untreated hearing loss can also influence your physical health and well-being and lessen physical activity. These factors all suggest that people with untreated hearing loss are more likely to have other chronic medical conditions than people with normal hearing.

Ear-Tronics

Treating your disabling hearing loss is beneficial in a variety of ways. Being fitted for hearing aids or other hearing-assistive devices by our team at Ear-Tronics can allow you continued success in your career and afford you a healthy social life, too.

When you take the steps to care for your hearing health, you can see the positive results all around you: enriching conversations with friends and family, fulfilling social interactions, more peace of mind. An ongoing relationship with our team at Ear-Tronics can ensure that your hearing aid is fitted to your needs over time. We can also act as a resource should you need anything. Schedule an appointment with Ear-Tronics today to begin living your happiest and healthiest life.