Truemag

  • Hearing
    • Ears
      • Glue Ear
    • Hearing Loss
    • Hearing Aids
    • Cochlear Implants
    • Hearing and Speech
    • MidLifers + Seniors
  • Connectivity
  • Parents
    • Child Assessments
    • Informed Choices
    • Child Audiology
    • Audiograms
    • Parent Stories
    • Agencies + Advice
  • Communication
    • Speech + Lipreading
    • Reading + Language
    • Bilingualism
    • Irish Sign Language
  • Schooling
    • Education Plans
    • Teachers
    • Creche + Preschool
    • Literacy
    • School Subjects
    • Peer Issues
    • Study + Work
  • News
    • Media
    • Blog
  • Home
  • Contact
  • About
    • What We Do
    • Caroline’s Bio
    • Social Impact
    • Gratitude
    • Testimonials
  • Get Involved
  • FAQ

Bilateral Cochlear Implants: Hearing With Two Ears

With bilateral cochlear implants (both ears) in Ireland’s news recently, here’s some information that may answer readers’ and families’ questions.

Read: Who is a cochlear implant candidate?

Some unilateral (single-ear) implant-wearers keep a hearing-aid in the other ear, and can recognise speech by listening through two ears. Others choose to ‘go bilateral’ with 2 cochlear implants, to maximise their hearing potential.

Read: Going Bilateral (published June 2010)

Children who ‘go bilateral’ may be better able to interact socially and to hear incidental sounds from the back seat of a car, on the street, on a playground or from a different room when at home. There’s also evidence that children who receive bilateral implants early, can have better speech perception.

Read: Early Bilateral CIs Improve Speech Perception

Daily and consistent use of the hearing-device/s is needed for the childrens’ speech perception and development to progress at an age-appropriate level. In adults, cochlear implants are also found to improve speech perception.

Read: Implants Improve Speech Perception For Adults

The quality of life improvement seen in CI-wearers will improve further, with HiFi capabilities in implants being researched by a team at Vanderbilt University (US) that uses image-guided processes when mapping devices.

Read: Putting HiFi Into Cochlear Implants

In cost and quality-of-life terms, cochlear implants are not the most pricey medical device, as the middle-slide on page 10 of this PDF shows.

Read: Costs of cochlear implants versus other procedures

Finally, the HSE can look to telepractice technology to deliver cost-effective intervention to the children and families accessing its hearing services.

More Reading

  • Bilateral Implant Wait List Concerns Irish Parents
  • ‘Happy New Ear’ To The HSE From A Parent Group
  • Newborn Hearing Test Follow-Up ‘Has Shortfalls’
  • Families To Write To The Health Minister On Implants
  • How New Zealand’s Hearing Tests Lead To Early Intervention
  • A TeleAudiology Program With Lessons For Ireland
  • How The HSE Can Use Telepractice To Cut Costs
  • Deaf Children ‘Can Learn Their Family Language’
Mar 14, 2013Team Sound Advice

Share this:

  • Click to share on Facebook (Opens in new window)
  • Click to share on Twitter (Opens in new window)
  • Click to share on Pinterest (Opens in new window)
  • More
  • Click to share on LinkedIn (Opens in new window)
  • Click to print (Opens in new window)
  • Click to share on Tumblr (Opens in new window)
  • Click to share on Reddit (Opens in new window)
  • Click to email a link to a friend (Opens in new window)
  • Click to share on WhatsApp (Opens in new window)
Study Supports For Doctors With Hearing IssuesCrowd-Computing: New Solutions For Captions
Comments: 2
  1. Sound Advice
    10 years ago

    Spoken Language and Bilateral Cochlear Implants (Sarant et al) http://www.audiology.org/news/spoken-language-and-bilateral-cochlear-implants

    ReplyCancel
  2. Caroline Carswell
    9 years ago

    Double #cochlear implants improve student grades (study of 44 wearers in Australia and New Zealand)

    http://medicalxpress.com/news/2015-08-cochlear-implants-student-grades.html

    ReplyCancel

Leave a ReplyCancel reply

This site uses Akismet to reduce spam. Learn how your comment data is processed.

12 years ago 2 Comments Education, Hearing, Language Development, Telehealthaware, bilateral, binaural, child, children, cochlear, communication, concept, deaf, deafness, dual, early, education, expressive, family, hearing, HSE, implant, inclusion, inclusive, infant, interact, interactive, intervention, Ireland, irish, language, learn, learning, literacy, mainstream, parent, parents, perception, preschool, read, reading, receptive, school, schools, social, sound, source, sources, speech, student, students, support, teach, teacher, teachers, teaching, technology, training, two, visual, words401
Get our Monthly e-Zine
Archives
eBook: Teaching A Deaf Child To Hear And Speak

Teaching A Deaf Child To Listen Cover

Edited by Caroline Carswell

StatCounter Page Visits
About

Sound Advice

Sound Advice - formerly Irish Deaf Kids (IDK) - is an award-winning, for-impact venture geared to technology-supported mainstream education and living for deaf children and students.

Sound Advice

Categories
  • Captions (165)
  • Education (407)
  • Hearing (633)
  • Language Development (278)
  • Smartphones (87)
  • Telehealth (82)
Archives
Get our Monthly e-Zine
© 2023 Sound Advice. Sound Advice is registered in Ireland as a sole trader (CRO 506131). © 2007 - 2014 Irish Deaf Kids. Company No. 462323 | CHY 18589