Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Are you really sure it is a mild hearing loss? If it is you might not have noticed. By the time other people notice the hearing loss in high frequencies is more than mild.
If you have a copy of his audiogram then look to see how many decibels is his hearing loss?
Mild hearing loss: 25 to 40 dB
Moderate hearing loss: 40 to 55 dB
Moderate-to-severe hearing loss: 55 to 70 dB
Severe hearing loss: 70 to 90 dB
Profound loss: 90 dB or more
Costco is really good if you are motivated to wear hearing aids and good with technology in terms of replacing batteries every few days and or recharging them. I took my mother to get hearing aids at Costco several years ago and she only intermittently wore them. The people working there were great, no sales push, and the prices was the really good compared to her audiologist. We all noticed a huge difference when she wore them but she said she found them hard to put in somedays and had trouble remembering to recharge them every night. I really wish we had pushed her more to wear hearing aids because it is a huge risk factor for dementia, which she now has.
Costco however does NOT sell Phonic Lyric hearing aids which are hearing aids that the audiologist inserts and then they stay in for 8 weeks (this can range from 6 weeks to 10 weeks depending on battery life). You cannot tell a person is wearing them since they are inside ear canal. My mother is still vain and loves this about them. She still doesn't want other people to know she wears hearing aids. They don't need to be charged ever or inserted daily. You sleep in them, shower in them, and can do everything in them except swim. I finally got my mom Lyric hearing aids and she loves them. They don't use the latest technology since they are disposable so you can't adjust them or use bluetooth and they are analog not digital. For her they are perfect.
Only about 10 % of audiologist have the training to sell them and they are more expensive than regular hearing aids because you pay a yearly fee. My mom pays $3600 a year. I really think they are totally worth $300 a month for her. I really wish she got them years ago.
https://www.phonak.com/en-us/hearing-devices/hearing-aids/lyric
This is such a puerile, absurd mentality. It's to your benefit if others know you can't hear well. They'll make more of an attempt to make themselves understood. Is your mother a child? WTAF. What a ditz.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:One more thing.
Stay away from rechargeable batteries. They are a pain.
For example, to turn them off (which happens more frequently than you imagine), you have to go put them in the charger. With air-zinc batteries, you just open the battery case.
If you don't put them in the charger correctly at night, the next day is a problem.
If you forget it on a trip, you are out of luck.
If you are out and a battery suddenly dies, that's that.
They may improve things, but right now they are just trouble.
Don't agree. The batteries drain very quickly.
How quickly? I have rechargeable and it's a pain to take the charger places and I have to charge overnight every night. Seems like batteries last at least a week.
That said, I do get how the expense of batteries is more expensive than the charger.
I totally don’t agree. I just charge every night. My father is jealous of my rechargeable batteries.
I'm another person with rechargeable. I travel a lot for business. My EArgo charger is tiny and light weight. It is about 1/2 the size of a deck of cards. It is no big deal to bring my Eargo charger when I travel. I charge my cell phone. I charge my laptop.
I charge my kindle.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:My father has had mild hearing loss and refused to get hearing aids. It has gotten worse recently and we talked him into going to an ent to ensure no issues (other than older age hearing loss) and he just went to an audiologist who us recommending he gets a $6,800 pair of hearing aids. It is a 30 day trial, and if does not like can exchange other models they have (not a true free trial) and has a one year warranty.
I was checking with a few friends and all of their parents used Costco and said that the highest price model there is about $2,500, has 180 day return and 3 yr warranty.
We are encouraging him to go to Costco to try theirs out and see and if they don’t work then get the other ones. He does not have a smartphone - so he is not planning on streaming music to them or using to take phone calls.
Price difference is HUGE.
Anyone have experience with the ones Costco sells?
He has a mild loss so maybe it's OK, but basically what Costco sells is utter shit.
You can either spend money on something that works or waste money on something that doesn't.
That said, my Phonak Naida 9s cost me about $5,000 for a pair. And those are top-of-the-line out of Denmark.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:One more thing.
Stay away from rechargeable batteries. They are a pain.
For example, to turn them off (which happens more frequently than you imagine), you have to go put them in the charger. With air-zinc batteries, you just open the battery case.
If you don't put them in the charger correctly at night, the next day is a problem.
If you forget it on a trip, you are out of luck.
If you are out and a battery suddenly dies, that's that.
They may improve things, but right now they are just trouble.
Don't agree. The batteries drain very quickly.
How quickly? I have rechargeable and it's a pain to take the charger places and I have to charge overnight every night. Seems like batteries last at least a week.
That said, I do get how the expense of batteries is more expensive than the charger.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:One more thing.
Stay away from rechargeable batteries. They are a pain.
For example, to turn them off (which happens more frequently than you imagine), you have to go put them in the charger. With air-zinc batteries, you just open the battery case.
If you don't put them in the charger correctly at night, the next day is a problem.
If you forget it on a trip, you are out of luck.
If you are out and a battery suddenly dies, that's that.
They may improve things, but right now they are just trouble.
Don't agree. The batteries drain very quickly.
How quickly? I have rechargeable and it's a pain to take the charger places and I have to charge overnight every night. Seems like batteries last at least a week.
That said, I do get how the expense of batteries is more expensive than the charger.
Anonymous wrote:Are you really sure it is a mild hearing loss? If it is you might not have noticed. By the time other people notice the hearing loss in high frequencies is more than mild.
If you have a copy of his audiogram then look to see how many decibels is his hearing loss?
Mild hearing loss: 25 to 40 dB
Moderate hearing loss: 40 to 55 dB
Moderate-to-severe hearing loss: 55 to 70 dB
Severe hearing loss: 70 to 90 dB
Profound loss: 90 dB or more
Costco is really good if you are motivated to wear hearing aids and good with technology in terms of replacing batteries every few days and or recharging them. I took my mother to get hearing aids at Costco several years ago and she only intermittently wore them. The people working there were great, no sales push, and the prices was the really good compared to her audiologist. We all noticed a huge difference when she wore them but she said she found them hard to put in somedays and had trouble remembering to recharge them every night. I really wish we had pushed her more to wear hearing aids because it is a huge risk factor for dementia, which she now has.
Costco however does NOT sell Phonic Lyric hearing aids which are hearing aids that the audiologist inserts and then they stay in for 8 weeks (this can range from 6 weeks to 10 weeks depending on battery life). You cannot tell a person is wearing them since they are inside ear canal. My mother is still vain and loves this about them. She still doesn't want other people to know she wears hearing aids. They don't need to be charged ever or inserted daily. You sleep in them, shower in them, and can do everything in them except swim. I finally got my mom Lyric hearing aids and she loves them. They don't use the latest technology since they are disposable so you can't adjust them or use bluetooth and they are analog not digital. For her they are perfect.
Only about 10 % of audiologist have the training to sell them and they are more expensive than regular hearing aids because you pay a yearly fee. My mom pays $3600 a year. I really think they are totally worth $300 a month for her. I really wish she got them years ago.
https://www.phonak.com/en-us/hearing-devices/hearing-aids/lyric
Anonymous wrote:Thanks for the info. I will get him an appointment at Costco and go with him (and of course get him a chicken after).
Hoping that it will work out.
Anonymous wrote:
That said, I do get how the expense of batteries is more expensive than the charger.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:One more thing.
Stay away from rechargeable batteries. They are a pain.
For example, to turn them off (which happens more frequently than you imagine), you have to go put them in the charger. With air-zinc batteries, you just open the battery case.
If you don't put them in the charger correctly at night, the next day is a problem.
If you forget it on a trip, you are out of luck.
If you are out and a battery suddenly dies, that's that.
They may improve things, but right now they are just trouble.
Don't agree. The batteries drain very quickly.
How quickly? I have rechargeable and it's a pain to take the charger places and I have to charge overnight every night. Seems like batteries last at least a week.
That said, I do get how the expense of batteries is more expensive than the charger.
I totally don’t agree. I just charge every night. My father is jealous of my rechargeable batteries.
Anonymous wrote:One more thing.
Stay away from rechargeable batteries. They are a pain.
For example, to turn them off (which happens more frequently than you imagine), you have to go put them in the charger. With air-zinc batteries, you just open the battery case.
If you don't put them in the charger correctly at night, the next day is a problem.
If you forget it on a trip, you are out of luck.
If you are out and a battery suddenly dies, that's that.
They may improve things, but right now they are just trouble.