Wednesday, June 1, 2011

The Way To Select A Cut-Price Hearing Aid

By Owen Jones


When you go to consult your 'ENT' (Ear, Nose and Throat) doctor, your otolaryngologist or your audiologist, it is best to have some personal understanding of hearing aids and the type of hearing aid you would like and can afford. If you do not have this information, you may come away from the doctor's surgery thinking that you have been rail-roaded into making a snap decision and purchasing an item that you would rather not have.

It is far better to go in with some information on hearing aids, then to listen to what the doctor has to tell you and then to do some more study on that supplementary information.

Many doctors' offices will offer you a selection of excellent hearing aids, but they are seldom discounted. You normally have to pay the full recommended retail price, which does not make sense, because everything is discounted somewhere these days.

The problem that you will undergo, if you attempt to get a cut-rate model is how to circumvent forgeries and seconds. Therefore, it is vital to check the article that you are buying against the specifications of an authentic item.

If you do this right, you could save between 25% and 50% on the MRRP (manufacturer's recommended retail price). In order to make sure that you have the legitimate article, take away literature on the doctor's recommended hearing aids from the doctor's office.

Get as much information on two or three hearing aids as you can along with the doctor's prices. Now you can go for a walk through town and surf the Internet searching for the precise same models at cut-rate prices.

Be wary of look-a-likes and forgeries. I once saw dozens of people buying greatly low-priced Nokia 97 mobile phones. Not many people noticed that it said: Nokla 97 on the phones' casing and of course, most of the functions of the original did not work. Checking the country of origin can be a clear indication, although most things seem to be made in China these days.

If the doctor's advice was for a digital unit, be certain not to be tricked by phrases such as 'programmable analogue' or even 'programmable digital', because they are not completely digital, although they are more effective than purely analogue hearing aids.

A truly digital device will have channels so that your audiologist can fine tune the device to your particular hearing problems. Make sure that the unit you are looking at has the same quantity of channels as your doctor's.

Check that the two devices are worn in exactly the same way, because a lot of manufacturers will make quite a number of models of hearing aid, so an HA991 could easily be mixed up with an inferior HA990, for example.

Study the data for both devices carefully especially with regard to the aid's sensitivity, directional microphones and sound reproduction capabilities.

Do both items have the same number of presets? And do they both have a memory for your preferred settings? These presets are not of necessity essential, but once you have used them, you will soon find them tremendously handy. This is a lot of information to keep in mind, but it is the only reliable way if you want to learn how to choose a discount hearing aid shrewdly.




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