Showing posts with label deaf & hard of hearing. Show all posts

What? Hearing Aids Are Out of Range for Most Americans (Op-Ed)


By Dr. Darius Kohan, Lenox Hill Hospital


While Thursday's U.S. Supreme Court ruling affirming the Affordable Care Act is good news for millions of Americans who receive subsidies from the program's health care exchanges, the vast majority of Americans with hearing loss will still be left with difficult choices.

Hearing aids , which amplify sounds, are widely considered the gold standard and first line treatment for hearing loss — yet fewer than one in three adults age 70 and older who could benefit from hearing aids has ever used one. This proportion is even lower among adults ages 20 to 69.

Mind the gap
Part of the reason for the treatment gap is that Medicare, the federal health insurance program for people age 65 and older, does not cover any of the costs associated with hearing aids, routine hearing exams or fittings for hearing aids. And, for the most part, these services are not covered by other U.S. government agencies or private insurers, although there are some exceptions. The U.S. Department of Veterans Affairs (which covers military service members) and some states cover hearing aids if an employee's hearing loss is job-related. Other states cover hearing aids for children younger than 15. And some high-end private insurance companies also cover some, or all, of the costs associated with hearing aids.

However, despite those exceptions, the United States is lagging behind in this area. Many other nations — including the United Kingdom, Israel, Germany and Belgium — offer at least partial coverage for hearing aids.

Based on standard hearing examinations, in the United States one in eight people — 13 percent, or 30 million individuals — age 12 or older has moderate to severe hearing loss, and the rates of hearing loss increase with age. Moreover, nearly 25 percent of people ages 65 to 74, and 50 percent of those age 75 and older, have "disabling" hearing loss, according to the National Institute on Deafness and Other Communication Disorders (NIDCD).
The NIDCD cites exposure to noise as a cause of hearing loss, but in my opinion, the aging of the population is driving hearing loss. People are living longer than ever before, and with advancing age comes the risk of hearing loss...

Read the full story at Live Science.
http://www.livescience.com/51369-hearing-aids-unavailable-to-most-americans.html

Exploring and re-evaluating my deaf identity, with the help of the film ‘My Song’

By DeafStudent

Yesterday, I suddenly realised something. The user name on my blog, DeafStudent, really is wrong. I’m not a deaf student.
I’m a student who happens to be deaf.
I know that some of you may be thinking, ‘big deal, so what?’, but it’s actually quite important. For me, my primary associative identity is the student part, not the deaf part.
I’m a student, I’m aspiring to be someone in my field, a published author, a respected lecturer, I’m all of that.
I have other identities too, other labels that society likes to slap on people – my gender, my skin colour, my sexuality, my marital status.
In all of that, being deaf is just another label for me. It represents what I struggle with, what I cannot do. It is very much a negative association, never a positive. I do what I do, achieve what I have, despite my deafness. It is a thing to be battled against. A war to be fought.
And by the way, I’m not by any means suggesting it should be this way for everyone. Many people are very proud to be deaf, to champion Deaf culture and language – and more power to them.
This blog post is about my thoughts, about my expression of my identity, and right now, I’m struggling to figure something out – when I get like this, I write. So bear with me.
I watched My Song yesterday, for the first time. It’s a wonderful, well acted and written, short drama from 2011 exploring deaf identity and language, portraying a teenage deaf girl, Ellen, learning BSL, making her first steps into the deaf world and the reactions – both negative and positive – to those steps, from the hearing people around her, to the deaf people she encounters...
Read the complete post at Limping Chicken.
http://limpingchicken.com/2015/06/17/deaf-student-deaf-identity/
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Conspiracy Against Deaf

conspiracy against deafIt is not a hearing loss, or hearing impairment, or hard-of-hearing, it is a Variation of Deafness. By reframing the semantics and epistemological approach to the discourse, we can change the hegemony of ruling elite who profit from current taxonomy of our Deaf Ethnicity and Deaf Culture as a medical deficit, or even moral deficit. Deaf is Linguistic Minority. The hair cells on my inner ear are structured differently. I therefore have a diverse perspective of sound. Current pedagogical practice in our education of medical professionals, who deem themselves as authorities over our bodies, is to view Deaf as bad. So they then authorize themselves to commercialize and capitalize by exploiting and oppressing the Deaf with their resulting praxis of audism.
The ontologlies of the Deaf need to be respected and heeded. ASL for all. Bilingualism. Deaf teachers for every school. Deaf politicians. Visual access to all public audio in buildings regulated by ADA. If they are equipped with voice public address systems, they should have LED overhead scrolling text message displays.
The epistemic violence enacted on Deaf community by banning sign language, removing Deaf teachers, mainstreaming into Oralism, hearing aids, lipreading, cochlear implants in babies and denying them access to sign language, genetic engineering, and also the denial of equal human rights through forced sterilization, illegal for deaf to marry deaf, deaf could not own property, and deaf could not get drivers license. This is Deaf history in America.
Deaf students caught signing had their hands tied behind backs, or strapped down overnight while sleeping if caught signing after bedtime in Oral residential schools, and hands were hit with rulers and sticks. Deaf children’s mouths were poked with teachers fingers during useless speech therapy instead of actually learning meaningful content and material such as history or math, subsequently getting pushed further behind. Perpetuating the notion of inferior or disabled. Disability, by the way, is caused by lack of accommodation. Being deaf, in itself, is not a disability. Audism can end when people learn that Deaf is a Diversity, not a Disability...
Read the full article at Brother Yellow 
http://brotheryellow.com/2014/05/15/conspiracy-against-deaf/
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Legislation to provide improved education for students with vision and hearing disabilities

My Experience and Tips Regarding Hearing Aid Dispensaries

By: Joyce Edmiston 

Thursday, May 15, 2014


Over the years, I've gone through at least 4 pairs of hearing aids. I've always had good experience at the audiologists office, until last week. What we experienced should not happen to anyone. You'll find a tip or two to help you here if you are in the market for new hearing aids, or getting a pair of used ones refurbished for yourself.

I was given a pair of barely used hearing aids from a generous heart who now has a pair of cochlear implants. I was thrilled the day they arrived, happy to move on from my 10 year old aids,  (which were also pre-owned and came to me courtesy of the Coos Bay Lion's Club in Coos Bay, Oregon).

Fabulous Husband made an appointment for me over in Lancaster with an audiologist to get the hearing aids fitted and reprogrammed for my particular hearing loss. When he called and inquired about the fee for reprogramming a pair of hearing aids, they told him it would cost $200.00.

We ran through the standard hearing test, I learned nothing new. However, I did ask if the hearing aids worked. The audiologist told me we would not know until the ear molds were made.

I had to have custom ear molds made with vents to keep the air flowing into my ears. I have chronic ear disease and this is a must. This pair of ear molds cost Fabulous Husband $175.00 on the spot.

When the ear molds were ready, we went back to begin the process of getting the donated hearing aids reprogrammed. We were absolutely ecstatic that I would soon be hearing better than I have been been with my old hearing aids. I have them turned all the way up these days. I desperately need more volume because I'm loosing clarity of sounds. I'm not able to distinguish words or sounds as well as I used to.

When we arrived, we were told that we had been quoted the incorrect fee for reprogramming the hearing aids. It would not be $200.00 for the pair, but $200.00 per hearing aid.  to reprogram both would be $400.00.

I saw a different audiologist at this appointment. He was very kind, and genuinely tried to do everything he could to get the hearing aids working. One did not work at all and would need to be sent in for repairs. That would cost an additional $200.00.

We tried the other hearing aid. It was awful. I could hear myself, it was fuzzy and barely could hear anyone else. The audiologist tried everything he could think of.  He was on the phone with the company helping with downloading the program, but nothing was working. I was beginning to think they just didn't believe me about how bad these were sounding. My old hearing aids were far clearer than this newer one.

The audiologist stepped around from behind the desk and asked if he could listen to one of my old hearing aids. I could tell by the surprised look on his face that he was not expecting such a difference between my old hearing aid and this much newer one. He picked up the phone and told the person from the company that makes these new hearing aids that my "about 15 years old" hearing aids were better than these newer ones...

Read the full article at xpressive handz

http://xpressivehandz.blogspot.com/2014/05/my-experience-and-tips-regarding.html

A Deaf Woman Adopts A Deaf Dog Who Knows Sign Language

by Steven Ertelt | Washington, DC
Rosie, a deaf pit bull mix, spent three months at the Central Nebraska Humane Society beforeCindy Koch, a woman who is also deaf, adopted her. Rosie has learned a few signs, like thumbs-up for “good girl,” and Cindy plans to keep teaching the pup more.
This is a touching little story because it shows the wonderful ways in which people with any sort of disability can improve their lives. But for some abortion activists, disabled unborn babies should become abortion victims because they’re not “perfect.”
deafdogThe staff at a Nebraska humane society says it can be hard for older or disabled dogs to get adopted.
But one three year old pit bull who captured the heart of avolunteer is headed to her forever home with a very special family who can relate.
Both the dog and her new human, are deaf.
Tracie Pfeifle says Rosie the pit bull faces challenges that other shelter dogs don’t.
“You can get most dogs’ attention by saying their name or making a sound, but she can’t respond to that because she is deaf,” Pfeifle said.
So Pfeifle has been teaching Rosie sign language.
“We started using treats and putting the treat up to your face and saying ‘good girl’ with your thumb up and then she figured out how, that we were communicating with her,” she said.
‘Good girl, sit, down, stay, outside, and walk’ are basic commands, but Pfeifle says it brought the three-year old out of her shell.
“It was just amazing to watch her just blossom into a dog, I don’t think she knew how to be a dog,” Pfeifle said.
Watch the video at Life News
http://www.lifenews.com/2014/05/16/a-deaf-woman-adopts-a-deaf-dog-who-knows-sign-language/

Getting a Feel for Helen Keller



By Sean Margaret Wagner

I can’t speak for the original, genteel Southern Kellers, but it was a privilege to keep house for century Kellers and as much of their languid estate that would fit in our pint-sized theater. My Kellers opened their home to scores of Minnesota arts enthusiasts, but mostly the pack of 21st shied away from hob-nobbing with the locals. The captain, his wife, son, spinster sister and unruly little daughter would hurry for their fanciest attire backstage, leaving the staff and our theater founder Stacia (soon to transform into Annie Sullivan) and myself to greet patrons for that afternoon’s performance of ‘The Miracle Worker’. Not just any patrons, our favorites: van-loads of differently abled school groups. Our company, Torch Theater was the brainchild of Stacia Rice, and built to provide a theater experience for everyone, even those with blindness, deafness or virtually any impairment that may prevent them from enjoying a traditional theater production. The pre-teen who inspired the venture, was Rice’s own nephew, Taylor, legally blind, wheelchair bound from childhood meningitis and thus the perfect candidate for a tactile tour of the Keller estate. 

We’d encourage the group to get hands on, and ushered them to a lobby filled with gowns, turn-of-the century toys, and fine china place settings. These were the very items they might soon hear clattering to the floor or feel breezing by in close proximity in our small playing space. The kids would traverse the Keller estate, as well, invited onstage to feel the chair backs and bedsides. They’d watch as we would snake our hands over the center stage wrought iron water pump, and produce a little trickle in the bucket below. They would tilt their heads, searching for the mechanism that makes it work, but none of the staff would breathe a word to ruin the stage magic. 

Really, the tactile experience was a peek behind the curtain for anyone used to being ushered to a seat to partake in theater from afar. An enterprising youngster had the potential to discover all the secrets of our luxurious Southern estate: the halfway built walls, the lush-looking silk flower gardens, and the yards of colorful tape marking just where the buffet and tea cart should reside. They could venture into the Keller dining room and find out first hand why the staff discouraged anyone helping themselves to breakfast. That ham on the bone looked delicious from row E, but was frozen rock solid. The tray of biscuits were crumbly doorstops at least a week old, and the tureen piled high with “eggs” was just instant rice dyed bright yellow on closer inspection. No matter; most children had the faintest pop-culture understanding that much of this terrible buffet would be thrown to the floor in protest by Helen herself in a few short minutes. The yellow rice that fell victim to the gleeful battle was as pervasive as garden weeds, sticking on skirts, shoes, pant cuffs and chair legs. 

The staff would offer the guests of honor seats at front row center and, at the behest of parents and chaperones, distributed a bevy of Braille indented programs and ear-phone listening devices set to play a recorded ‘Miracle Worker’ audio description. Two very modern looking stools perched in an out-of-the-way Keller vestibule now had occupants: a pair of black-clad American Sign Language interpreters looking out over a sea of theater patrons for any pairs of hands that were gesticulating more actively than others. 

Torch Theater had only estimated the need for a stage hand; someone to sit patiently with a book until time came to collect rice-soiled costumes and emerge with a mop and bucket when the crowds dispersed. But, we discovered a great many functions going unfilled when crowds would file in each night. Ushers, box office staffers and tactile tour guides would turn up absent and I would take up the slack. I remember nothing about the promotion, but I like to imagine it as a ‘dramatized for television’ moment in which theater founder Stacia approached me, likely dressed in her Annie Sullivan spats and dark glasses, to say “Kid! You’re moving up the ladder- how does ‘Co-Managing Director’ sound? And as long as you’ve got time to chat, run to my car for some more Braille programs, eh?”
All I really remember is my resulting favorite task: welcoming the audience at the top of the show, asking them to turn off their cell phones and reminding them to stick around after the show for an audience talk-back. The cast would return to the stage after a good douse of water from the wrought iron pump, and answer audience questions. The once blustering Kellers would find themselves providing uncharacteristically silent support to Annie & Helen. Those nights were a flood of questions for our leading ladies: Can you really see and hear? Was it hard to pretend? Does it hurt when she throws you into that chair? Where did you learn how to fight like that? The ladies would look to each other with the faint understanding that in the span of two hours they’d created a room full of young advocates for the differently abled. If these patrons had had no curiosity about how the other half lives, or even the bravery to ask questions when they arrived, some of that misplaced anxiety had been worn away with every word spelled D-O-L-L style into Helen’s hand. 

Sean Margaret is a Chicago playwright, musical bookwriter/lyricist and storyteller. You can find her on Twitter: @SMargaretWagner

You can read more at Sporkability.org 

Legislation to provide improved education for students with vision and hearing disabilities

WASHINGTON: The American Foundation for the Blind (AFB) announced the introduction of H.R. 4040—the Alice Cogswell and Anne Sullivan Macy Act, the most comprehensive education legislation for students with vision or hearing disabilities to date.
Person reading Braille.“Right now, our schools are not prepared to help children who are vision disabilities or hearing disabilities  develop to their fullest potential, and we are determined to change that,” said Paul Schroeder, vice president of programs and policy at AFB. “H.R. 4040 would provide vital resources and establish requirements to help students with vision and hearing disabilities excel in the classroom, at home, and in their communities.”
The legislation would ensure:
  • Every child who is deaf and every child who is blind, regardless of whether they have additional disabilities, will be properly counted and served
  • Each of a child’s unique learning needs will be properly evaluated
  • States will engage in strategic planning to be sure that they can in fact meet each child’s specialized needs
  • The U.S. Department of Education will do its part to hold states and schools accountable
  • Students who are deaf will be served by qualified personnel
  • Students who are blind will receive state-of-the-art services and skills supported through a new major national collaborative initiative addressing their unique learning needs
Read the full article at Global Accessibility News 
(http://globalaccessibilitynews.com/2014/02/17/legislation-to-provide-improved-education-for-students-with-vision-and-hearing-disabilities/)

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A Deaf Linguist Explores Black American Sign Language


Joseph Hill, an assistant professor at the University of North Carolina at Greensboro, believes he is the only black, deaf, Ph.D. linguist in America, and maybe in the world. “Just me,” he told an audience of about 40 people on Sunday at the Linguistic Society of America’s annual meeting in Minneapolis. “No pressure,” he added.
Hill, who is 34, and tall, was giving a talk, “How Black ASL Can Create Opportunities for Diversity in Sign-Language Research,” as part of a symposium on diversity in linguistics. He was speaking in American Sign Language, of course, but because his lips moved along with his hands, to a listener in the back of the room it seemed as if he, and not the interpreter, was talking. That is, until Hill’s lips stopped moving and the voice of the interpreter kept going. (The interpreter turned out to be seated unobtrusively at the front, speaking into a microphone with his back to the audience, so he could read Hill’s signing.)

Read the full article at Chronicle 
(http://chronicle.com/blogs/percolator/a-deaf-linguist-explores-black-american-sign-language/33817)

WE SPOKE TO A MAN WHO'S BEEN DEAF HIS WHOLE LIFE ABOUT HEARING MUSIC FOR THE FIRST TIME

By Dan Wilkinson


How long could you cope without music for? In terms of addiction, it’s not exactly heroin, but as anyone who has embarked on a long distance journey with an MP3 player that is devoid of battery will tell you, going without music is hard. Imagine then, being unable to hear properly for your entire life. Austin Chapman has struggled with profound deafness since birth until a year ago, when he received a new set of hearing aids that changed his life. To him, it was like seeing the world through a pair of high definition 3D goggles, when he’d previously only witnessed monochromatic pixelated visuals. It changed his perception of everything. 
With a lifetime worth of music to catch up on he posted on Reddit, asking people to tell him what music to listen to. Eager to find out what a previously deaf man’s perception of music is, and eager to hear his story, I sat down with Austin and asked him a few questions. 

Read the full article at Noisy.Vice

(http://noisey.vice.com/blog/we-spoke-to-a-man-who-has-been-deaf-his-whole-life-about-hearing-music-for-the-first-time)

Why Are Glasses Perceived Differently Than Hearing Aids?


All bodies are getting assistance from technology all the time, yet some are stigmatized.Abler is one woman's quest to rectify this.

Without technology, the human body is a pretty limited instrument. We cannot write without a pen or pencil, nor eat hot soup without a bowl and, perhaps, a spoon.

And yet, only certain technologies are labeled "assistive technologies": hearing aids, prostheses, wheelchairs. But surely our pens and pencils, bowls and spoons assist us as well. The human body is not very able all on its own. 

My curiosity about how we think about these camps of "normal" and "assistive" technologies brought me to Sara Hendren, a leading thinker and writer on adaptive technologies and prosthetics. Her wonderful site, Abler, was recently syndicated by Gizmodo. I talked to her about why crutches don't look cool, where the idea of "normal" comes from, and whether the 21st century might bring greater understanding of human diversity.

Read the full article at the Atlantic 

(http://www.theatlantic.com/technology/archive/2013/12/why-are-glasses-perceived-differently-than-hearing-aids/282005/)

Has An Identity Crisis Immobilized The Field of Sign Language Interpreting?


 | December 3, 2013
During my attendance at the 2012 Region IV RID Conference in Denver and the 2013 National RID Conference in Indianapolis I found myself in tears more than once. While it is not uncommon for me to become emotional when I am with colleagues discussing the very serious, real and important issues that impact our work as interpreters, the tears I felt at these conferences were different. It was not until a moment of clarity during the business meeting in Indianapolis that I realized the difference.
It was not long after the start of the Business meeting in Indianapolis when I experienced a shift in my awareness about my emotional response during both conferences. It occurred as I was witnessing discussion and decisions regarding the use of spoken English via open microphone. As I was sitting there, feeling helpless, looking around the room feeling the heavy and volatile energy – I realized I felt as if I was witnessing a war. A battle waged between two perspectives, the deaf and hearing world, both fighting for recognition.
As a person who has grown up in both worlds, I have struggled with my own identity and place in each world since I can remember. Sitting there, I found myself relating with perspectives from both “sides.” As I type this, it strikes me that it may not seem such a powerful realization. After all, this struggle between the two worlds has been going on for years.
By framing this struggle through the lens of war and making the connection between my internal struggle and the mirror reflecting around me I found clarity that I have not yet experienced.
Read the full article at Street Leverage 
(http://www.streetleverage.com/2013/12/has-an-identity-crisis-immobilized-the-field-of-sign-language-interpreting/)

Parenting A Deaf Child


Finding Out

My husband and I found out that our youngest son was deaf when he was around 3 months old. This news came after he spent a month in theNICU fighting for his life. He had passed the newborn hearing test that was given prior to him leaving the hospital, so when we were told the news, the shock was almost overwhelming.
The first thing that lead us to be concerned was the fact that our son would not turn his head to loud noises. He wouldn't get startled by the barking dog or a large truck that would go by the house. Babies have a natural reflex when they are startled. He never got startled. People could in and out of the door, there could be a lot of commotion, but the noises never seemed to bother him. Even his older brother running and hollering around the house didn't phase him.
At his 3 month check-up we brought our concerns to the doctor. At the time, we didn't actually believe that he was deaf but we felt that something was not quite right. The doctor set up a hearing test with the audiology department at the hospital. We went to the test and after, the doctor met with us to give us the news: Our son had profound bilateral sensorineural hearing loss. That meant that he had profound hearing loss in both ears. The damage was permanent and hearing aids may or may not help...
Read the full article at Christinascibona 
(http://christinascibona.hubpages.com/hub/Parenting-A-Deaf-Child)

3 Things You Should Never Do When Communicating with the Hearing Impaired



I’ve lived with hearing loss for close to 15 years.  In that time, I’ve had a lot of interesting interactions with folks who learn about my disability. Here are three things that you shouldn’t do to a deaf or hard-of-hearing (HOH) individual.

Shout.  Just because someone has difficulty hearing, does not mean it justifies shouting. Do you want to speak a little louder, slower and clearer than when you interact with others? Yes.  But there is no need to shout.  Clearly communicate what you want to say and be sure to make eye contact with them.

Read the full article at Xpressive Handz

(http://xpressivehandz.blogspot.com/2013/11/3-things-you-should-never-do-when.html?spref=fb)

15 Sign Language Interpreters Going Ham At Concerts! Can You Hand-le It?

We all lost our minds for Lydia Callis last year when she delivered animated sign language interpretations for New York City’s Mayor Bloomberg during super-storm Sandy. When it comes to actual entertainment, however, it makes sense that concert sign language interpreters would really give it their all too.
A hearing impaired concert-goer is of course present to see their favorite artists perform, but they’re also spending a good portion of their time watching and being entertained by the person signing. They may not be able to listen to music in the same way that other folks can, but between the vibrations from the bass and a good sign language interpreter, concerts can still be highly enjoyable. Here’s a look at the people who really COMMIT when they interpret an artist’s lyrics, and in some cases, even provide some funky dance moves.
CONCERT: Kendrick Lamar
Confidently evoking Kendrick’s swag during “F—in’ Problems,” the enthusiasm from this interpreter is top notch!


http://www.vh1.com/music/tuner/2013-09-15/kick-ass-sign-language-interpreters/

Deaf News: Motion calling for recognition of BSL as an official UK language passed at Liberal Democrat party conference

Posted on September 17, 2013



Greg Judge speaks at the Liberal Democrat conferenceFollowing a debate this morning at the Liberal Democrat party conference, the Liberal Democrats today passed the policy Recognising a Legal Status for British Sign Language,which calls for better access to information and services for Deaf people.
The Liberal Democrats say they are committed to the principle that Deaf people are entitled to identify with their own language and to have this respected, regardless of minority or majority language status.
The key proposals include:
· The recognition of British Sign Language (BSL) as one of the UK’s official languages
· Achieving better awareness of information needs and services for BSL users, particularly in health, education and employment
· The protection of the linguistic integrity of British Sign Language
Read full article via Limping Chicken 
http://limpingchicken.com/2013/09/17/deaf-news-motion-calling-for-recognition-of-bsl-as-an-official-uk-language-passed-at-liberal-democrat-party-conference/

Richard Turner: My review of the film ‘A life without words’

Posted on October 7, 2013

I recently watched one of the most moving films I have ever seen. It was called A Life Without Words and it raised a lot of questions in my mind. It made me realise just how much we take for granted in this country and how hard it really is for many Deaf people living in the developing world with no access to basic healthcare services, audiology, education and even language.
Image
I went to see the documentary at the Royal College of Medicine in Central London. After the showing, there was a panel discussion with the film’s director, Adam Isenberg, and three other people. Dr Michael York, an anthropologist from University College London (UCL) chaired the panel discussion.
http://limpingchicken.com/2013/10/07/richard-turner-my-review-of-the-film-a-life-without-words/

Indigenous sign languages protected in online dictionary

Sep 12, 2013

A University of Melbourne researcher has helped develop the first online dictionary of sign languages used by Indigenous communities across central Australia.

The dictionary includes several hundred videos of hand-signs and other sign-actions used by Anmatyerr speakers from Ti Tree in the Northern Territory, and by the Ngaanyatjarra people in the Western Desert of Western Australia.
Dr Jenny Green—from the University of Melbourne's Research Unit for Indigenous Language —said signing was a crucial but endangered style of communication in Indigenous communities...
via Phys.org

A Breakthrough for Treating Hearing Loss

Tuesday, September 24, 2013

Eric Healy
Eric Healy, professor of speech and hearing science and director of Ohio State’s Speech Psychoacoustics Laboratory, and DeLiang Wang, professor of computer science and engineering, have provided the first demonstration of a processing algorithm capable of improving speech understanding in noise for hearing-impaired listeners.
"It's an important problem because poor speech understanding in background noise is the number one complaint of hearing-impaired listeners," said Healy, the study's lead author. "People with hearing loss are simply not good at pulling speech from background noise—because this algorithm does that job for them, their limitations are rendered moot." 
http://artsandsciences.osu.edu/news/a-breakthrough-for-treating-hearing-loss

Welcoming Art Lovers With Disabilities




ON a recent Friday night, the Metropolitan Museum of Art in New York held its first public exhibition of original art made in its “Seeing Through Drawing” classes. Participants — all blind or partly sighted — created works inspired by objects in the museum’s collection that were described to them by sighted instructors and that they were also allowed to touch.

In another gallery, a tour in American Sign Language was followed by a reception for deaf visitors. And on select Fridays, new “multisensory stations” invite all guests — including those with a range of disabilities — to experience exhibits though scent, touch, music and verbal imaging, or describing things for people with vision impairment.
“The Met has a long history of accessibility for people with disabilities,” said Rebecca McGinnis, who oversees access and community programs. As early as 1908, the museum provided a “rolling chair” for people with mobility issues, and in 1913 held talks for blind public school children, she said. Today, there are programs for people with disabilities nearly every day...

http://www.nytimes.com/2013/10/27/arts/artsspecial/welcoming-art-lovers-with-disabilities.html?_r=1&

Deaf News: Deaf people can now use sign language to get advice from the Financial Ombudsman



Posted on October 16, 2013


Nine out of ten people say they have no complaints about their bank, insurer or finance firm.  In fact,  most financial transactions take place without any problems. But sometimes things do go wrong. And when they do it is up to the business to try and sort it out.
For the Deaf community this can be problematic. They are often trying to deal with bureaucracy in their second language. British Sign Language is the first language of around 130,000 Deaf people, with one in 6 people experiencing some hearing loss. Signed languages are visual languages with their own syntax and grammar.
The majority of businesses and their websites are not accessible in sign language and they are unlikely to help arrange and pay for a sign language interpreter to deal with a complaint.
http://limpingchicken.com/2013/10/16/deaf-news-deaf-people-can-now-use-sign-language-to-get-advice-from-the-financial-ombudsman/