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The Hearing Review Podcast

  • Why General Chips Are the Next Big Leap in Hearing Device Technology

    7 FEB 2023 · In this podcast, I will be speaking with Ben Sun, CEO and founder of Orka. He was a former hardware engineer at Apple. He left life in the big tech to design and launch a hearing aid product called Orka One. Ben will be speaking with us about the role of a chip inside a hearing aid and how technology innovates the hearing aid performance and enhances the user experience.
    17m 4s
  • Update from Hearing Loss Association of America (HLAA) Executive Director Barbara Kelley

    20 APR 2022 · The Hearing Loss Association of America (HLAA)—the largest US advocacy group for people with hearing loss—has been busy working with the FDA, FTC, FCC, HHS, NIDCD, CTA, and the various professional and industry groups in hearing healthcare on virtually everything related to hearing and access issues. In this 26-minute podcast, HLAA Executive Director Barbara Kelley talks with Hearing Review Editor Karl Strom about: •HLAA’s plans for its upcoming convention on June 23-25, •Thoughts and concerns about the FDA’s proposed rules for over-the-counter (OTC) hearing aids, •The possibility of Medicare coverage for hearing aids and related services in the near future, •How diversity, equity, and inclusion in hearing healthcare might be improved and expanded, and •Information about the early-2022 website launch from the Industry-Consumer Alliance for Accessible Technology (ICAAT)—a collaboration between HLAA, Gallaudet University and the American Institutes for Research—that brings together technology developers with consumers who have hearing loss to create and inspire more accessible, innovative and responsive technologies.
    26m 32s
  • OTC Hearing Aids and How FDA Rules Might Change Hearing Care, with Dr Tom Powers

    10 MAR 2022 · In this 35-minute podcast, well-known hearing industry audiologist Thomas Powers, PhD, and Hearing Review Editor Karl Strom talk about four noteworthy parts of the proposed OTC hearing aid regulations:  1) Output limits for these new devices; 2) The return-for-credit policies, and if consumers will have some kind of recourse if the hearing device doesn’t work for them; 3) The somewhat wonky area of 510k premarket clearance relative to “wear and go” vs “self-fitting” OTC devices, and why it could be important; and 4) One of the most confusing and potentially consequential parts of the FDA’s proposed regulations: the pre-emption of state laws and what this might actually mean for hearing care professionals, their practices, and state licensing boards.  Dr Powers also speaks to labeling issues and provides his advice about how hearing care practices and their staff members might prepare for the advent of OTC hearing aids. For more great coverage, subscribe to our newsletters below: https://info.medqor.com/hrsubform
    35m 15s
  • The Special Olympics and Starkey Partner To Empower and Serve Special Olympics Athletes

    3 MAR 2022 · Karl Strom, Chief Editor of The Hearing Review, is joined by Special Olympics Chairman Timothy Shriver & Starkey CEO Brandon Sawalich to discuss their organization's partnership to provide life-changing health services and hearing instruments to Special Olympics athletes around the world and help train more healthcare professionals to make healthy hearing more inclusive of people with intellectual disabilities. Starkey and Special Olympics, the international non-profit organization dedicated to transforming the lives of people with intellectual disabilities through sport, health, and education programming, announced they have signed a global partnership agreement that increases access to hearing health services worldwide for individuals with intellectual disabilities. To read more about the partnership and find links to get involved, visit the article linked below: https://hearingreview.com/inside-hearing/industry-news/olympics
    21m 39s
  • Journey Into the Dead Zone, with Brian C.J. Moore, PhD, University of Cambridge, England

    23 DEC 2021 · An introduction to cochlear dead zones—or the absence of the inner hair cells in a region of the cochlea where the basilar membrane vibration can’t be detected—by perhaps the world’s foremost authority on the subject. He also describes his Threshold Equalizing Noise (TEN) Test for identifying cochlear dead zone regions. Dr Moore describes how these regions might be created, possible tell-tale signs and tip-offs for presenting in a patient, and their implications for treatment of hearing loss and hearing aid fittings. Interviewed by Hearing Review Editor Karl Strom. Originally broadcast December 8, 2008. For More Hearing Review Content, subscribe here: https://info.medqor.com/hrsubform
    23m 56s
Podcast by The Hearing Review
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