Basics About Long Island Audiology

By Marissa Velazquez


In Long Island audiology as a term was coined from a Latin term audire, which means hear in the English language. Audiology refers to a branch of science which deals with the management, treatment, diagnosis, and study of disorders related to balancing and hearing in human beings. Professionals who diagnose, manage, treat, and study hearing-related problems are called audiologists. They have different qualification levels in different countries.

Audiologists treat people with hearing loss and also give treatment that prevent further damage to the hearing system. They do their job by use of various strategies such as otoacoustic emission measurements, electrophysiologic tests, videonystagmography, and hearing tests. All these techniques and many more aim at determining if a patient can hear within the normal range. They also determine which section of hearing is impaired in people who cannot hear in the normal range.

There are three sections of hearing that are likely to get impaired, that is, high, middle, and low frequencies and they all get impaired to various levels. After the tests are carried out and a problem such as hearing loss or vestibular abnormality is determined, the practitioner prescribes various options that are available. Various options for use in such cases include cochlear implants, hearing aid, appropriate medical referrals, and surgery.

Audiologists have training in diagnosis, management, and treatment of balancing and hearing problems. Besides that, they have the authority to recommend and map cochlear implants and dispense hearing aids. They counsel families that have infants with hearing loss and also help people who become deaf at old age how to cope with the situation by teaching compensation skills. As such, they are also found in rehabilitation centers.

Audiologists are also known for helping in implementation of school and newborn hearing screening programs and industrial and personal hearing safety programs. They give special fitting ear devices among other protective appliances that safeguard against deafness in adults and after birth. Some choose to work in various research programs as auditory scientists. They spend several hours in a day working and the work environment is the same to that of many medical professionals.

In some US states, for one to have a career as an audiologist at clinical capacity, they have to be doctors or professors of audiology. States that have not installed that requirement will have to adopt it sooner or someday later. During the study, the learners must take and pass national tests various competencies stipulated by bodies concerned with management of this practice within the United States. Also, there is a 12-month full time, monitored practice experience that learners must attend.

Students have comprehensive knowledge in acoustics, anatomy, physiology, electrophysiology, cochlear implants, physiochophysics, neurology, counseling, and sign language. Audiologists usually graduate a masters degree, ScD, STI, PhD, or Au. D depending on the state and school attended. A license or permit in dispensing of gadgets that magnify sound is required for specialists to prescribe and dispense the devices.

Long Island audiology is very advanced. It is carried out by qualified professionals who use very sophisticated and top of the class equipment. Facilities that provide these services are uniformly spread within the area for ease of access to them at any time.




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