I have BTE aides. My audiologist had a special set of molds made for the scope. I use an E scope. These molds have the "vent hole", as all hearing aides do, and there is a pocket made in that area specifically fit to the tips for my scope. I put the scope tips in this pocket (or pit) and the amplification of the scope goes through the vent hole and to my ears that way.
I just started with a scope today and I have so far two drawbacks.
1. The scope is fairly heavy, therefore has a tendency to slide out of these pits. I think a small shelf on the lower part of mold would stop the sliding.
2. Since I am basically bypassing the aid itself with these pits in the molds, I can leave the hearing aides in place, which is great since I don't have to fear losing them. BUT, I haven't turned them off and therefore hear ALL noises that I would hear whether listening for sounds or not. When a person without aids puts the scope tips in their ears, it does muffle some of the outside noise, making hearing those sounds easier. I haven't quite figured out how I am going to handle this because if I actually turn the aids OFF, then I wouldn't be able to hear anything at all except what is coming through the scope.
In any case, if you have in ITE aids, the Escope offers earphones that plug in to the unit and you can just put the earphones on over your aids!
Another offer is a plug in device that works on BTE's, but it requires modification of the BTE aid. Plus, you would have to stop and plug in the scope to your aides.
Just some thoughts
Originally Posted by graymama
That really sounds cumbersome! Especially if aides are in both ears... Is it just easier to not wear the aides??? I can easily see myself dropping things on the floor, batteries then rolling away, me crawling around while the patient sits there wondering what is so hard about a BP check....
Is this the only way? Perhaps I should start practicing graceful removal of hearing aides!
