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What Is The ‘Deaf Debate’ With Cochlear Implants?

What is the “deaf debate” with cochlear implants? Why can they be seen as controversial? This is one of the best pieces we’ve read on the topic, to date.

Read: The Deaf Culture versus Oral-Only Debate

Many people are curious about this debate, as a result of the Happy New Ear campaign which is seeking bilateral (two-ear) cochlear implants for babies and children in Ireland, who are suitable to have both ears implanted.

Read: Concern over backlog for cochlear implants

Research studies from different countries show bilateral implants give more benefits to child wearers, than when a unilateral (one-ear) implant is worn.

Speech perception and sound-source localisation are the two key benefits of having bilateral implants, according to a 2010 thesis by Rosemary Lovett:

The UK’s National Paediatric Bilateral Cochlear Implant Audit (April 2013) shows children with bilateral implants to significantly outperform children with unilateral implants, in the months and years after surgery:

PDF: National Pediatriac Bilateral Cochlear Implant Audit

Informed choice is the mantra for today’s parents, remembering 90% of children with hearing issues are born into families who use spoken language.

More Reading

  • ‘Happy New Ear’ To The HSE, From A Parent Group
  • Deaf Children ‘Can Learn Their Family Language’
  • Early Implants Best For Baby’s Language Progress
  • Bilateral Cochlear Implants: Hearing With Two Ears
  • Bilateral Implant Wait List Concerns Irish Parents
  • Families To Write To Health Minister On Implants
Jun 10, 2013Team Sound Advice

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'Too Many Cheeky Dogs': A Hearing-Deaf BookLearning European Languages With Live Captions
Comments: 2
  1. Sound Advice
    9 years ago

    Natalie is now just past 2 years old. The Su family recently received results from an auditory test and found that her expressive vocabulary is on par with 3-and-a-half year olds.

    http://www.losaltosonline.com/special-sections2/sections/your-health/52875-los-altos-toddler-discovers-sound-through-cochlear-implants

    ReplyCancel
  2. Caroline Carswell
    7 years ago

    Declining cochlear implants would isolate us from our extended families in Spain, it would have prevented him from communicating with his grandparents, and would have made our yearly visits to Spain painfully isolating for him, as sign language varies in every country. http://www.chicagonow.com/foreign-affairs-children-edition/2017/06/the-hardest-decisions-are-the-ones-you-make-on-behalf-of-someone-else/

    ReplyCancel

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12 years ago 2 Comments Education, Hearing, Language Developmentaudiology, auditory, auditory-verbal, benefit, bilateral, child, cochlear, cochlear implant, controversy, deaf, deafness, debate, device, double, early, ears, gain, hearing, hearing aid, HSE, infant, intervention, language, listening, outcome, speak, spoken, test, two, unilateral, verbal324
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