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WEST PALM BEACH, Fla.– Most of the 28 million Americans living with untreated hearing loss may not be aware that failure to take corrective action could result in the brain actually "forgetting" how to hear and understand speech, warns audiologist Cindy Beyer, senior vice president of Hear USA, a hearing care and hearing aids company.
"When the brain is insufficiently stimulated by sound over a period of time, it can lose a portion of its ability to process information," said Dr. Beyer. "This condition is called auditory deprivation and studies indicate that the longer a patient goes without treatment the more likely it is that the brain will forget how to process speech, even after treatment is implemented.""These findings strongly suggest that delaying treatment for hearing loss for years, as so many do, can risk permanently impairing the brain’s ability to understand speech," said Dr. Beyer. She offered these facts about hearing loss: Thirty-six million Americans experience hearing loss. (American Academy of Audiology) While the vast majority of Americans (95%) with hearing loss could be successfully treated with hearing aids, only one in five currently use them. (University of California, San Francisco Department of Neurological Surgery) People with hearing loss wait an average of seven years before seeking help. (Center for Hearing and Communication) Those who have difficulty hearing can experience such distorted and incomplete communication that it seriously impacts their professional and personal lives, at times leading to isolation and withdrawal. (Better Hearing Institute)– Source: HearUSA

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