Those that have had experience with older family friends or grandparents with hearing loss and hearing aids may be familiar with the unpleasant squealing noise (hearing aid feedback) that hearing aids can make. Squealing hearing aids can be embarrassing for those with hearing aids if they are aware of the hearing aid feedback. Hearing aid feedback may be equally embarrassing if the people wearing the hearing aids are unaware of the feedback despite feedback being audible to others. People with significant hearing loss may fail to hear the feedback noise emanating from their hearing aids. What is hearing aid feedback? When might hearing aids produce feedback? Why do hearing aids produce feedback and how can hearing aid feedback be avoided? Has technology advanced sufficiently to address the problem of hearing aid feedback? Or is it fair to predict the feedback from today’s hearing aids based on past experiences with older generations of hearing aids? Which hearing aids have access to the technology that suppresses hearing aid feedback? These are questions we will address.
What is hearing aid feedback?
The feedback or squealing sound that hearing aids can make, is as a result of a sound loop. The sound which the hearing aid speaker releases into the ear is recycled back into the hearing aid via the hearing aid microphone and passes through the amplification process again and again in a loop generating a whistle or squeal.
Why do hearing aids produce feedback and how can hearing aid feedback be avoided by people with hearing loss?
Technological advances that address the problem of hearing aid feedback for those with hearing loss.
Modern hearing aid software provides multiple avenues of support to eliminate hearing aid feedback for people with hearing loss.
Which hearing aids suppress hearing aid feedback for people with hearing loss?
People with hearing loss that have investigated the potential financial cost of acquiring hearing aids would be aware that different levels of hearing aid technology are available at different prices. Simple hearing aids are more affordable than more sophisticated hearing aids. The question arises as to whether less sophisticated, lower-cost hearing aids still support individuals with hearing loss by providing feedback suppression technology. Fortunately, there is consensus amongst hearing aid manufacturers that hearing aid feedback is a problem that no one with hearing loss should have to face. Hearing aid feedback suppression technology is generally available across the board across all hearing aid levels regardless of the cost of the hearing aids.
Knowing what hearing aid feedback is and when and why hearing aids produce feedback is helpful. Hearing aid feedback can be avoided using practical strategies and relying on technological advances in hearing aid feedback suppression software. Technological advances in modern hearing aids are so effective, that hearing aid feedback will be a problem very rarely encountered by folks with hearing loss. This is true regardless of the cost of hearing aids. Only those with very significant hearing losses requiring significant amplification can expect to continue experiencing feedback from their hearing aids. Most of us that carry unpleasant childhood memories of grandparents’ hearing aids squealing can rest assured that those embarrassing experiences will remain in the past. Make sure to book a hearing test at Attune Hearing to get your hearing evaluated. The qualified Audiologists are able to help you manage your hearing loss and find solutions, like hearing aids, that will enable you to enjoy life and hear every sound.