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Cochlear Implants Misconstrued In The Economist

On July 20th 2013, The Economist published a very damaging article about cochlear implants, which give families with born-deaf children valuable opportunities, such as using two spoken languages in the family home.

Read: Listen Up: Technology That Lets Deaf People Hear

Team Sound Advice recommends reading the below response from the founder of the Cochlear Implant Online website, herself implanted as a young child:

Read: Listen Up: The Most Ill-Informed Article About Cochlear Implants In The Economist

Choice is a core issue with implants, and parents choose for a child’s future:

Read: The Deaf Culture versus Oral-Only Debate

Today’s parents know their options and in Ireland, child implants allow dual-country families to speak fluent English with – for example Basque, Arabic, French, Dutch, Swedish or other language/s. That’s if the baby’s hearing issues are detected early, and they get implant/s by 18 months of age.

This video also shows how cochlear implants can benefit children:

Conclusion:

Parents who choose cochlear implants for their child/ren have done huge amounts of research with much soul-searching. Accordingly their decisions deserve to be respected by others – which sadly, is not always the case.

More Reading

  • What Is “The Deaf Debate” With Cochlear Implants?
  • “Ninety-Five Decibels” – A Movie About Parent Choices
  • The Sky’s The Limit, When Parents Are Informed (bilateral hearing)
  • What Exactly Does Oral Deaf Education Involve?
  • How Policy Can Lag The Grassroots Reality
  • What It Feels Like … to have a deaf child
  • Deaf Children ‘Can Learn Their Family Language’
  • Early Implants Best For Baby’s Language Progress
Jul 24, 2013Team Sound Advice

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Comments: 2
  1. Michelle
    11 years ago

    How is The Economist article ‘damaging’? It’s good they are showing a different side to cochlear implants- they are a wonderful thing but are not a full cure to deafness. Embrace all perspectives and research so that all parents and users can make a fully informed choice. It’s best that IDK present the article as it is without being seemed as biased by stating that its ‘damaging’.

    ReplyCancel
  2. IDK
    11 years ago

    Several points in The Economist article stood out as being inaccurate when it was first published online: since then, their editorial team has been communicating with a large number of people and groups who were unhappy with the article.

    Most parents know to research when making their decisions on behalf of children – this article was heavily discussed online, meaning that most readers already have their own views, and know where to get more information, if they need.

    ReplyCancel

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11 years ago 2 Comments Hearingaccess, auditory, choice, cochlear, cochlear implant, communication, country, deaf education, dual, family, future, hearing, implant, implants, informed, Ireland, language, listening, literacy, mainstream, options, parent, parents, policy, preschool, read, schools, skills, social, speech, spoken, support, teaching, verbal307
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