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--- You wrote:

Thank you , I appreciate your message! Could you tell me how

much hearing loss your son had to have to get cochlear implants? I'm

just curious...I've been told that the hearing loss must be profound

as in almost no hearing, is that true?

--- end of quote ---

I attended an all day conference at DHMC sponsored by Cochlear, one of the

cochlear implant companies. It was excellent and our own Flanders gave an

fabulous talk on legal stuff.

The folks at Cochlear said that more important than the level of hearing loss

(which can be at a severe level) is how the child does with hearing aids. If

they're getting benefit from their aids, they may not be an implant candidate.

But the level of hearing loss criteria has relaxed down to a severe hearing loss

now.

Barbara

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Thank you for your support, I cannot tell you how good it is to hear

from someone else, I feel as though this board is like a life

preserver. I really felt quite alone.

> Hi Regina,

> Thanks for the intro. Unfortunately your story is all too

common. The medical community has much to learn about listening to

parents' concerns about their children. There certainly are good

doctors and nurses out there, and we have come a long way in the

past few years, but more education is needed.

> My son Nick, is 14 and our family signs. Of course, he can also

read and write, but his speech is very hard to understand. Hearing

aids did not help him, and we decided against the cochlear implant

when he was young.

> He is very happy using sign language and being deaf. There are

many challenges and decisions ahead for you and your family, but

much joy as well.

> :)Charlotte

>

> Another newbie

>

>

>

> My name is Regina. My son is deaf. He failed his newborn

screening

> but when we went for a follow up ABR a few months later he

passed.

>

> When he turned one everyone kept telling us it was normal for

boys

> to talk late. When my son was closing in on his second birthday

he

> still only said three words. My pediatrician was worried and

> referred me to Early intervention. All of the people we dealth

with

> in the EI program were very nice. The only complaint I have is

that

> every time we suggested our son had a hearing loss it was

suggested

> that we were in denial and that my son had some sort of mental

> difficulties.

>

> I kept going for hearing screenings but the problem was the only

> tests my son kept getting were behavioral -- try to get a two

year

> old boy to respond " appropriately " . Each test kept showing only

a 25

> dec. loss which kept being attributed to fluid in the ear.

December

> of last year my husband and I decided that we would find out

once

> and for all and not by in office machinery or by behavioral

tests

> but by a real ABR whether my son could hear and how much. I had

to

> argue with my pediatrician to get a referral. She actually told

me

> that the equipment they use in the office is the same thing an

> audiologist would use. (This equipment I'm talking about is the

> instrument they put in the ear to see if you have an

unobstructed

> canal).

>

> Needless to say we waited months to get in to the place I knew

would

> give a thorough test. They didn't even have to do the ABR. My

son

> was conisistent every time on the behavior test. We went to an

ENT

> and got the same results. So we found out my son was deaf for

> certain this past June.

>

> The dissapointment we feel at his not being diagnosed sooner and

> therefore getting hearing aids, learning sign language etc. is

> inconceivable. He is now 3 1/2 years old. He has 65 dec. loss in

his

> right ear and his left ear isn't transferring noises properly

with a

> 55dec loss. He was fitted for hearing aids in August and has

been in

> the early intervention program since he was two. He started

> mainstream pre-k in Sept. He has a part-time teacher of the deaf

and

> the teachers take turns using the FM system.

>

> He is talking tons now (not in complete sentences) and knows a

lot

> of signs. I was teaching him signs previously but I didn't dive

into

> it because I kept getting the perception that hearing wasn't my

sons

> issue.

>

> I am so happy to have found this list-serve. I know only a few

deaf

> people and can't find anyone locally in the same situation. I

look

> forward to hearing others stories and maybe gleaning some

> information on different ways to help your child excell and be

happy

> with themselves. I'm sorry I babbled on but hope someone will

relate

> to my story as well.

>

>

>

>

>

> All messages posted to this list are private and confidential.

Each post is the intellectual property of the author and therefore

subject to copyright restrictions.

>

>

>

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  • 8 months later...

<<Someone recently wrote a 9-page response to a newbie >>

Chereie,

That might have been me, because I do tend to ramble on. So sorry, I'll do

it again and again. (grin)

Welcome to the list! There are moms and dads here, but it seems to be heavy

on the mom side. We have some parents who are professionals in the D/HOH field

as well, but they're here as parents not consultants. It's a

parent-to-parent thing. Personally, I love hearing all the different points of

view. Gives

me a chance to consider things from new angles.

I'm Jill (there are two Jills on the list, a first for me since I never meet

anyone with this name!). I'm the mother of two and have been married to my

furry beast for 23+ years. My eldest, Ian is almost 15 and has a deteriorating

hearing loss. It's at the moderate level for now and he is oral. My daughter

is 11, hearing and hormonal as only a preteen can be. My little ones now

look me in the eye and I have the smallest feet in the house.

You certainly have your plate full right now! This is a great place to come

for advice or support for things about your Grace's hearing loss. Some

parents here know about the other issues you mentioned, so you may find

pointers

for those as well. The lingo will become second nature very soon, so just ask

if you see an acronym you don't recognize.

It sounds like you are checking into everything that I can think of. We also

went through the medical rollercoaster to diagnose everything. I think most

of us have been through a version of that. By the time we got to the

geneticist, I had a folder of test results for him to use in diagnosing Ian's

syndrome. (Goldenhar)

Depending on the syndrome they diagnose, there are programs and hospitals

that specialize in them. Montefiore here in NY is a cranio-facial center, and

Ian's syndrome is one of those. It was amazing to find them so close to me

(okay, 2 hours away, but still close enough) I'm sure you can find info and

support once you have an idea which syndrome you're dealing with.

There are letters on the Listen-Up site that were used by parents to get

their insurance companies to pay for hearing aids. We didn't win that, but

honestly I gave up trying. It can be done with the written support of your

doctors. Take a look. I plan to try again with Ian's new aids.

Yes, you can get loaners to try out aids before purchasing. Each

audi/hosptial seems to have their own rules for this. The place where we got

Ian's aids

would have sent us a single type of aid to try -- one kind at a time for

free. If we had wanted them to sent 2 or 3 at once, then we would have had to

purchase one set. We'd then have kept whichever ones he liked best. I don't

know

about using loaners to see if aids will give any benefit. Some hospitals

have a sufficient supply on-hand and have loaned them to families while they

get

their own. Ask your audiologist or ENT about that, they'd know more about

local resources.

As for help paying for aids, most of the ones I know base their help on

financial need. The one exception to that is our local Lion's club. The

chapters

are locally controlled and each decides what kind of community service

they'll focus on. Ours supports hearing and vision issues for kids. We've been

told

that our income is not the deciding factor. They'll help families with more

dire needs first, but if we have a need and they have the funds available,

they would be delighted to help. They have also been known to fund raise for a

family who needs help. They've run everything from spaghetti dinners to

raffles. So, call your local chapter and see what their focus is and if they'd

be

interested. You might be pleasantly surprised. If you feel shy about asking

for help, you can have a friend call for you. Sometimes friends are better at

this than we are, I know mine are.

However, given everything your family is dealing with, you may very well

qualify for help from places like Job's Daughters. (_www.thehikefund.org_

(http://www.thehikefund.org) ) That is the daughter's organization within the

Masons. It is an organization where kids fund raise to help other kids. The

actual

name is Hearing Impaired Kids Endowment Fund. (HIKE) Last year they raised

close to 400K and that is used to buy aids for children. There is an

application form on the website.

So, now you have another 9-page post to add to your collection (grin)

Welcome to the list!

Best -- Jill

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