Interesting take on telecoils: Stop Trash-Talking Telecoils! â Gael Hannan â Better Hearing Consumer
Quote:
I donât know how to say this more clearly: Telecoils in my hearing aids have made my life better .
Better, happier, easier, and more connected. And Iâm not the only one â there are gazillions of us. Because of this positive experience, itâs frustrating for us â the hearing loss advocates and international organizations â to hear that audiologists are advising against telecoils, saying theyâre âold technologyâ and here, try this newest, greatest thing!
Without telecoils, I wouldnât have been able to use the phone as well as I have for the past 20 years. I still use it to talk on the phone, both cell and landline, daily.
Without telecoils, I would continue jostling for space at the front of a group or crowd, to sit in the front row so that I could better see and lipread the speaker. Now I can stand at the back of a crowded hall â like I recently did at the national conventions of the Canadian Hard of Hearing Association and the Hearing Loss Association of America. In plenary sessions and smaller workshops, the speakersâ voices flowed beautifully into my devices. (Bluetooth canât do that â the poor speaker would have 100 transmitters handing around her neck or pinned to his clothes.)
Without telecoils, I wouldnât have been able to use audio guides in museums, art galleries, boat tours and other facilities around the world that care about inclusion for people with hearing loss. I would have had to rely on imperfect relay by the Hearing Husband or get by just with the visual information.
Iâve used telecoils in other looped environments such as at church, at the bank, and watching TV. When Iâm presenting or performing, in addition to the audience area being looped, I ask for the stage area to be looped as well, because it lets me hear myself better (always a good thing for the presenter).
Still, many audiologists say that telecoils are âoldâ technology, as if discoveries come with a âUse Byâ date when they are suddenly no longer useful. I mean, hey! What about the wheel? Itâs a very old invention â and to this day, wheels still make our world go âround. Like the song says: big wheel keep on turninâ ! Penicillin and insulin were invented in the 1920âs and they are still saving lives. So, while telecoils are decades-old, they still provide crucial and exquisite access to communication.
Hearing care professionals need to stop trash-talking telecoils, because people with hearing loss around the world love them! We love how switching our devices to the telecoil mode connects us to other people. And itâs not an âeither-orâ situation. We also love what Bluetooth does for us when we can use it. We adore the improvements in speech-to-text technology. We are passionate about captioning.
We want it all and today we can have it all â but only if hearing care professionals put client needs first and look at our overall, everyday hearing requirements. And if they are still not convinced â simply because we say so â we strongly recommend they attend a consumer hearing loss event. There, they can see for themselves the look on the face of a person with hearing loss when they use telecoils for the first time in a workshop or when someone sings the national anthem. That look of wonder is worth a CEU (Continuing Education Credit).
If youâre a person whose hearing care professional tries to talk you out of a telecoil, be polite but firm: Give. Me. A. Telecoil! And if that doesnât work, find a more person-centered care clinic.