Find out all about hearing loss and how treating it helps to maintain good health.
One in five people worldwide has some form of hearing loss. Our ability to hear changes as we get older: about 1 in 10 people experience a hearing loss at the age of 60 years but 6 in 10 experience a hearing loss at the age of 90 years.*
Hearing loss can be difficult to self-diagnose, because most symptoms of hearing loss develop gradually. Here are some of the main signs of hearing loss to watch out for.
Difficulty understanding others, especially in crowds or other background noise.
Frequently asking others to speak up or repeat themselves.
Regularly turning up the volume of the television or radio.
Withdrawing from conversations or avoiding social situations.
Most hearing loss occurs due to damaged hair cells in the inner ear, in the cochlea. These tiny hair cells detect sound waves. The cochlea often becomes less sensitive to sounds as we age, so we lose some sensitivity and our hearing deteriorates.
In other cases hearing loss can arise from prolonged exposure to loud sounds, genetic factors, physical injury, disease or infection.
Because hearing loss makes communication with others difficult, it can result in people doing fewer social activities. This can affect your quality of life and may lead to isolation.
Hearing loss is often a problem as people age. Because hearing loss makes it harder to socialise and remain active, people with hearing loss may do fewer of the things they enjoy and lack stimulation, and it may lead to loneliness. For these reasons, the earlier hearing loss is addressed and treated, the better.
This is the most common type of hearing loss, and it occurs when the inner ear or the auditory nerve is damaged. It is permanent in most cases.
1. Auditory nerve
2. Inner ear
When sound is unable to pass from the outer ear to the inner ear, it’s called conductive hearing loss. This can be caused by a blockage such as an infection, or compacted earwax. It can also come from damage to the eardrum or ossicular bones in the middle ear. It can be treated medically in many cases.
1. Outer ear
2. Middle ear
This is when both sensorineural hearing loss and conductive hearing loss occur in the same ear. Treating the conductive component can help reduce the hearing loss, but the sensorineural hearing loss will most likely remain.
1. Cochlea
UWhen communicating with clients and architects it is very important for me to understand what is being said. (…) thanks to Bernafon hearing aids, I can perceive what is being spoken again - normally.
Dietmar Ludewig
Independent craftsman, Switzerland
Without Bernafon hearing aids I wouldn't be able to fly, because I wouldn't be able to communicate with the co-pilot or the tower, and this hobby wouldn't be possible for me.
John Guttink
Amateur pilot, Netherlands
*World report on hearing. Geneva: World Health Organization, 2021. Licence: CC BY-NC-SA 3.0 IGO.