Information on Hearing Loss, Treatment & Prevention
North State Audiological Services compiled the following information to help you and your loved ones understand the importance of hearing care in all of our lives. Additionally, we hope to provide you with some answers to your hearing related questions. These hearing care resources will help you to better identify signs of hearing loss, allow you test your own hearing, and give you a better understanding on how to protect your hearing. Please review the information in these links and feel free to contact us if you have any further questions.
Facts About Hearing Loss
Life is enriched by the experiences we have through our five senses: sight, touch, smell, taste, and hearing. Hearing is especially vital; it enables us to communicate our wants, needs, and emotions. Learn more about the types and degrees of hearing loss, as well as practical tips for prevention and treatment options.
Treating Tinnitus (Ringing in the Ears)
Tinnitus is a medical condition characterized by persistent ringing in one or both ears which can only be heard by the affected individual. It has also been described as whistling, hissing, buzzing, or pulsing in the ear.
How To Treat Tinnitus (Ringing in the Ears)
Loss of Balance, Dizziness and Vertigo
Dizziness or loss of balance is the second most common complaint heard in doctors’ offices. The good news is diagnosis and treatment options have become more effective over the past 10 years.
Read about Treatment for Loss of Balance, Dizziness and Vertigo
Hearing Loss in Children
Hearing loss at any age is an emotional issue and robs you of a sense that adds so much to the richness of life. Fortunately, many causes of hearing loss are treatable, and it is often possible to return the sounds of childhood to a young life.
• Learn about Hearing Loss in Children
• Take our online hearing assessment
How Hearing Tests Work
From an initial interview to an examination, hearing tests are available to help hearing care professionals determine the nature of your hearing loss.
The four-step hearing test process explained
Communication Tips For Your Family
Your family does not know how you hear. What they do know is that you do not hear well! Learn valuable tips for communicating with someone in your family you may suspect of having hearing loss.
Practical tips for communicating with someone who has hearing loss
Protect Your Hearing
Exposure to excessive noise during work or leisure activities can increase a person’s risk of hearing loss and potentially worsen a pre-existing hearing problem. Since there is no cure for noise-induced hearing loss, prevention is the sensible alternative.
Know how to protect your hearing
What Is an Audiologist?
Audiologists are doctors that specialize in the diagnosis and treatment of hearing loss. They can fit and adjust the latest hearing aids and are often trained to treat balance problems, tinnitus, and speech or language disorders.
Find out what an Audiologist does
Hearing with Two Ears
One good ear isn’t enough—it takes two to truly understand what we’re hearing. Listening with both ears (also called “binaural hearing”) improves our ability to understand speech, filter out background noise, and determine the source of sounds in our environment.