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Getting Hard of Hearing
People in the Loop
Imagine yourself using a cassette recorder to tape your favorite
radio program from across the room. Alas, when you play back
the program the words are muffled and barely audible. Moreover,
you have also taped the neighbors lawn mower, the kitchen
dishes clanging, the dog barking. Next time you record the broadcast
by jacking your recorder directly into the radio. Now you find
the sound delightfully clear and without distracting noise.
That contrast conveys what I, as one of Americas 28 million
hard of hearing people, experienced the first time I enjoyed
the full benefit of sound delivered via my hearing aid telecoils
(T-coils).
I discovered this new joy of listening in Europe. Its
not that the technology is unknown here in America. I already
knew that with a simple button push my hearing aids can shut
off their microphones and receive, via the T-coil, the magnetic
signal from any recently manufactured phone. Bingo! In a noisy
setting, the hearing aids block room noise and the telephone
broadcasts right to my eardrum.
Pretty nifty. But not nearly so nifty as what I first experienced
two years ago in Scotland. With 300 others, I was worshiping
within the high stone walls of the 800-year-old Iona Abbey.
Amplified but reverberating off the Abbeys hard surfaces,
spoken words posed a challenge. Or so they did until my wife
noticed a sign indicating an induction loop system (ILS)which
transmits from an amplifier through a mere wire surrounding
the seating area. When I switched on my T-coil, the result
was dramatic. The babble of people was replaced by the sweet
harmonies of musicians playing in front of microphones across
the Abbey. My mouth fell open. It was like listening to a
CD over a headset.
When the service began, my astonishment increased. The leader's
words seemed to travel straight to the center of my head,
her voice deliciously distinct. If I pulled the hearing aids
out, her words went out of focus. Other hearing-aid settings
boosted sound from distant loudspeakers, yet left me guessing
at words.
Back in Scotland for a recent Royal Society of Edinburgh
conference, I found myself surrounded by great minds with
soft low voices. Alas, even when I positioned myself centrally
I heard no more than half the discussion, and one hates to
risk seeming a fool by jumping into a half-heard discussion.
But the lecturers all had microphones, and I discovered (bless
these Europeans) that the Royal Societys lecture hall
and seminar room have an ILS. Voila! The speakers voices
became exquisitely clear. No reverberation. No amplified extraneous
noise. No long-distance from the sound source. Loop systems
effectively put my ears where Id like themin the
microphone, a foot from the speakers mouth.
Venturing out to Usher Hall for a symphony concert, to St.
Giles Cathedral for worship, and later up to St. Andrews where
we worshiped at two local parishes, I found induction loops
as common there as they are rare here in the USA. Indeed,
the UK Disability Discrimination Act decrees that by the end
of 2004 Any business or organisation providing a product
or service to the general public must have an Induction Loop
System fitted wherever information is verbally provided,
which explains why many UK grocery stores now offer looped
checkout lanes and many banks offer looped teller windows.
The U.S. may lead Britain in some innovations (why are mixing
hot/cold faucets still such a rarity in Scotland?), but we
can also learn from them.
Its not just the UK that leads America. Corresponding
from Denmark, the Rev. Jan Gronborg Eriksen, president of
Churchear, observed that
The sad thing about the American situation is that so few
of your hearing aids [about 30 percent] have a T-coil...compared
to 85% in my country. Here we can just install a good loop
system in a theater or a church building or any meeting room
(and we doour churches are almost 100% covered now),
and ask hard of hearing attendants to switch to T-position.
Understandably, induction loop systems are said to be undergoing
a worldwide renaissance. Compared to infrared and FM systems
they are less expensive, because they require no special receivers.
(T-coils are now a standard feature on many new digital aids
and add less than $100 to the cost of others.) They are an
invisible solution to an invisible problem (were more
likely to use a hearing assistance system that doesnt
require getting and wearing a klunky receiver and headset).
Moreover, loop systems harness our hearing aids customized
output.
Back in America, Ive recently tried switching on my
T-coil in churches, auditoriums, and theaters. The routine
result is silence. At looped Canterbury Cathedral and Westminster
Abbey I have enjoyed sparkling clear sound; at Washingtons
National Cathedral I recently spent a long hour with hardly
a clue what was being said. My college, like most, offers
a sign language interpreter for major events. Such is wonderful
for the third of a million Americans who are fluent in ASL
but not for the many millions of hard of hearing. In hostile
listening environments our common experience is frustration,
embarrassment, isolation, and stress. Like Deaf ASL speakers,
we, too, would welcome clear communication.
And why not? Induction loops are too affordable and effective
not to be routinely installed. If churches, auditoriums, theaters,
lecture halls, council chambers, courts, tour buses, and senior
citizen centers would install loops as part of their PA systems,
millions more people would be motivated to buy T-coil-equipped
hearing aids and would find their lives enriched. Designated
counter loop systems can also assist T-coil wearers
as they stand on a pad in front of a ticket or teller window.
Looped TV rooms in homes and hotels can likewise broadcast
sound directly into our hearing aids, minus background noise.
I have looped my TV room, which means that with the mere flick
of the hearing aid switch to telecoil (or telecoil plus mike
if I want to hear conversation, too) I receive wonderfully
clear sound. The possibilities are exciting and the lesson
is simple: Where there are loudspeakers, let there be loops.
Hope College social psychologist David G. Myers is author
of A Quiet World: Living with Hearing Loss (Yale University
Press).
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