Disability
Information - Hearing Impaired (HI), Deafness, or Hearing Loss |
General
Information
Education
& Classroom Accommodations
Michigan
Resources, Support Groups, Listservs & Websites
National
Resources & Websites
Articles
Related to this Disability
Medical
Information
MI
MPSC To Fine Company For Not Providing Deaf Phone Service
(MIRS, 4/14/16) The Michigan Public Service
Commission (MPSC) today found a company did not provide required
telecommunications relay service (TRS) for its deaf, hard-of-hearing and
speech-impaired customers. The MPSC approved an order stipulating it would
charge CMC Telecom $200 each day it's been in violation. The MPSC will reopen a
proceeding to determine what date, if any, the company began providing TRS.
This follows a June 2015 order the MPSC issued directing CMC Telcom to
show it was providing TRS. In 2014, AT&T told the MPSC it was moving out of the
business of providing TRS statewide in early 2015, which left some other local
providers to arrange for providing their own TRS.
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General Information |
See:
http://seriweb.com/hearing.htm
The Individuals with Disabilities Education Act (IDEA),
formerly the Education of the Handicapped Act (P.L. 94-142), includes
"hearing impairment" and "deafness" as two of the categories under
which children with disabilities may be eligible for special education
and related services programming. While the term "hearing impairment"
is often used generically to describe a wide range of hearing losses,
including deafness, the regulations for IDEA define hearing loss and
deafness separately.
Hearing impairment is defined by IDEA as "an impairment
in hearing, whether permanent or fluctuating, that adversely affects a
child's educational performance."
Deafness is defined as "a hearing impairment that is so
severe that the child is impaired in processing linguistic information
through hearing, with or without amplification."
Thus, deafness may be viewed as a condition that
prevents an individual from receiving sound in all or most of its
forms. In contrast, a child with a hearing loss can generally respond
to auditory stimuli, including speech.
Source:
NICHCY
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Education & Classroom
Accommodations |
Hearing loss or deafness does not affect a person's
intellectual capacity or ability to learn. However, children who are
either hard of hearing or deaf generally require some form of special
education services in order to receive an adequate education. Such
services may include:
regular speech, language, and auditory training from a specialist;
amplification systems;
services of an interpreter for those students who use sign language;
favorable seating in the class to facilitate lip reading;
captioned films/videos;
assistance of a notetaker, who takes notes for the student with a
hearing loss, so that the student can fully attend to instruction;
instruction for the teacher and peers in alternate communication
methods, such as sign language; and
counseling.
Children who are hard of hearing will find it much more difficult than
children who have normal hearing to learn vocabulary, grammar, word
order, idiomatic expressions, and other aspects of verbal
communication. For children who are deaf or have severe hearing
losses, early, consistent, and conscious use of visible communication
modes (such as sign language, fingerspelling, and Cued Speech) and/or
amplification and aural/oral training can help reduce this language
delay. By age four or five, most children who are deaf are enrolled in
school on a full-day basis and do special work on communication and
language development. It is important for teachers and audiologists to
work together to teach the child to use his or her residual hearing to
the maximum extent possible, even if the preferred means of
communication is manual. Since the great majority of deaf children
(over 90%) are born to hearing parents, programs should provide
instruction for parents on implications of deafness within the family.
People with hearing loss use oral or manual means of communication or
a combination of the two. Oral communication includes speech, lip
reading and the use of residual hearing. Manual communication involves
signs and fingerspelling. Total Communication, as a method of
instruction, is a combination of the oral method plus signing and
fingerspelling.
Individuals with hearing loss, including those who are deaf, now have
many helpful devices available to them. Text telephones (known as TTs,
TTYs, orTDDs) enable persons to type phone messages over the telephone
network. The Telecommunications Relay Service (TRS), now required by
law, makes it possible for TT users to communicate with virtually
anyone (and vice versa) via telephone. The National Institute on
Deafness and Other Communication Disorders Information Clearinghouse
makes available lists of TRS numbers by state.
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Michigan
Resources, Support Groups, Listservs & Websites |
Hands & Voices:
Non-biased Support for Families of Children Who are Deaf or Hard
of Hearing - The Chapter's support comes from the Early
Hearing Detection and Intervention (EHDI) program of the
Michigan Department of Community Health with grant funds from
the Maternal Child Health Bureau, Health Resources and Services
Administration of the U. S. Department of Health and Human
Services. The board meets the fourth Saturday of every month in
Holt, Michigan. For more information or to become a part of this
dynamic and necessary organization, contact Amy Lester, Parent
Consultant for the Early Hearing Detection and Intervention
Program at
lestera@michigan.gov or 517-335-8273. You may also contact
Michigan Association for Deaf Hearing and Speech services (MADHS)
at 1-800-YOUR-EAR.
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National Resources &
Websites |
American Society
for Deaf Children
National Organization which provides information, support, and
advocacy to help improve the educational, recreational, and health
care opportunities of deaf and hard of hearing children and youth.
Web:
www.deafchildren.org
Phone: 1-800-942-ASDC (942-2732) Parent Hotline
FACT SHEET:
Telephone Access for People with Speech
Disabilities
Deafuture.com - Their
mission is to provide access to information about laws, education, and
related services to hearing families and relatives with deaf children,
building a community that will enable them to reach their maximum
potential.
Alexander Graham Bell Association for the Deaf and
Hard of Hearing
(202) 337-5220 (V); (202) 337-5221 (TTY)
E-mail: info@agbell.org
Web: www.agbell.org
American Society for Deaf Children
1-800-942-2732 (Voice/TTY); (717) 334-7922 (V/TTY)
E-mail: ASDC1@aol.com
Web: www.deafchildren.org
American Speech-Language Hearing Association
(301) 897-5700 (Voice/TTY); 1-800-638-8255 (Helpline)
E-mail: actioncenter@asha.org
Web: www.asha.org
National Institute on Deafness and Other Communication Disorders
Information Clearinghouse
1-800-241-1044 (Voice); 1-800-241-1055 (TTY)
E-mail:
nidcdinfo@nidcd.nih.gov
Web: www.nidcd.nih.gov/
Self Help for Hard of Hearing People (SHHH)
(301) 657-2248 (Voice); (301) 657-2249 (TT)
E-mail: national@shhh.org
Web: www.shhh.org
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Articles Related to this
Disability |
GA
Special Needs Student is Resolute -
In a dimly lighted room, 14-year-old Chelsea Gilliland read aloud
as she skimmed her hands along rows of raised dots, letting her
fingers see the words. The LaFayette High School freshman is legally
blind, hearing impaired and has trouble walking. Despite her physical
handicaps, Chelsea has succeeded in school, making all A's and B's.
Infant Hearing
and Resources - The National Center for Hearing Assessment and
Management (NCHAM) at Utah State University was established to ensure
that all infants and toddlers with hearing loss are identified as
early as possible and provided with timely and appropriate services.
Their information and resource center contains a wealth of information
and resources concerning the many dimensions of early hearing
detection and intervention.
Closed Captioning (CC)
FAQ - What are closed captions? How does captioning work? Who
watches closed captions? Who pays for captioning? This
informative FAQ contains answers to these questions and more.
KY
Child Misdiagnosed With
ADHD Making The Grade After Real Problem Found - What if the
diagnosis just doesn't fit, and your child is still struggling? It
could be something you've never heard of, yet "hearing" is what it's
all about.
Hearing
Loss Can Mean Learning Loss for up to 15% of Students -
Hearing loss takes a toll on learning. Children with severe or profound
hearing loss are easy to spot, but those with moderate or minimal hearing
problems sometimes go undetected and many experience a slow but steady decline
in academic achievement. "The numbers are shocking," said an assistant
superintendent for student services. "I'm sure we underestimate the prevalence
of hearing loss in our schools, and we overlook the fact that most classroom
learning depends on hearing and listening."
Class Helps 3-year-old
Through Disability - With five of his classmates, Christopher
sits in a diminutive chair at a low table eating a snack at Lynchburg
City School's Hutcherson Early Learning Center.
MI
Deaf mom fights to keep
kids from ear implants
Video on Classroom
Acoustics Released - A new video is now available on innovative
designs and technologies for improving classroom acoustics. The video
derives from a longer program on school design developed by the
Information Television Network with sponsorship from the Board and
other organizations. Copies of the video, Classroom Acoustics:
Listening vs. Learning, can be ordered from the Educational Audiology
Association at (800) 460-7322.
MI
Grand Rapids Children's Cochlear Implant Case:
Amicus Brief
MI
Michigan Judge
Rules Deaf
Boys Needn't
Undergo Surgery
MI
Deaf mom gets the
'no' she wants -
The judge who ruled against
forcing two deaf boys to get cochlear implants said Friday she
believes the devices would help them -- but it's not up to her
to decide.
Read "NTID
tries to learn why deaf find science difficult"
Helping to
fight the effects of being deaf - In a sense, Brett E.
Holt is one of the fortunate.
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Medical
Information |
There are more than 50,000 people with cochlear implants
worldwide--about ˝ are children. On July 24th, 2002 (updated August
15, 2002), the FDA issued a Public Health notification--Cochlear
Implant Recipients May Be At Greater Risk for Meningitis. This
notification indicates that in a period of 14 years, 52 cases of
meningitis were reported - mostly in children (some adults). An
independent review described in the FDA publication identified 22 of
the 52 worldwide cases as occurring in North America (9-Advanced
Bionics,
13-Cochlear Corporation, 0- MED-EL). While the FDA announcement
discusses the possible association between implants and meningitis,
it also explains that the implant has not been proven to be the
cause of the meningitis in the cases noted.
Regarding this possible relationship between implants and meningitis,
the following issues should be taken into consideration:
· Any surgery in the inner ear can increase the risk of infectious
diseases like meningitis.
· Some deaf individuals may have congenital abnormalities of the inner
ear that make them prone to meningitis with or without an implant.
· Some individuals who are deaf from meningitis may be at increased
risk for subsequent episodes of meningitis in comparison to the
general population.
What the implant manufacturers are saying---
· In the case of the Cochlear Corporation--Their review of data
suggests that the overall incidence of meningitis with the Nucleus
device is comparable to the incidence of meningitis in the general
population. As stated on the Cochlear Corporation website, " the
incidence of bacterial meningitis for patients implanted with
Nucleus is 14.3 cases/100,000/year in North America and 10.2
cases/100,000 worldwide. This is similar to the incidence in the
general U.S. population of 2.4-10 cases/100,000 a year." They have
found that the majority of the reported meningitis cases following
implantation with their device primarily involved individuals with a
history of cochlear malformations, or meningitis prior to surgery.
· In the case of Advanced Bionics-- The design of the electrode
positioner in the Clarion CII implant is being considered as a
possible predisposing factor to meningitis. Advanced Bionics
voluntarily removed their Clarion CII implant from the market while
the necessary modifications were made to manufacture and distribute
the CII without the positioner. The modified system is now available.
As stated in the Advanced Bionics website-- a significant proportion
of the reported cases with their implant that had the posistioner
involved two centers in Europe. Increased incidence in Europe may
possibly be due to lower vaccination rates there.
In the case of MedEl--As noted above, there have been no reported
cases of meningitis with MED-EL.
While the possibility of contracting meningitis associated with
implantation may be rare, the following precautions should be taken
prior to implantation:
· Discuss the need for a meningitis vaccination with a doctor prior to
implantation. The recommended vaccine may differ depending on your
child's age. This vaccination would be in addition to vaccinations
routinely required. See
http://www.fda.gov/cdrh/safety/cochlear.html
for a list of recommended vaccines. If the vaccination is not
covered by an insurance provider, contact the implant manufacturer to
inquire about their vaccine reimbursement policy.
· Assure that the recipient is symptom free of otitis media or other
infections at the time of implantation.
What if a person already has an implant?
· As ear infections sometimes precede the occurrence of meningitis,
implantees should be treated promptly and aggressively.
· Implantees should discuss the possible need of a meningitis
vaccination with their doctor
· As the risk of contracting meningitis seems to be far less than the
risks associated with surgery, removal of the cochlear implant
positioner (Advanced Bionics) is not recommended.
Compiled by:
Debra Nussbaum, M.A. CCC-A
Coordinator, Cochlear Implant Education
Center
Laurent Clerc National Deaf Education Center,
Gallaudet University
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