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My name is Joanne Swinbourne and I have trust issues.
Don’t worry, I’m not getting all deep and personal here on Limping Chicken! But I do want to come out and say that I have deep trust issues – with audiology departments!
Watch a BSL translation of this article by Helen Foulkes below:
Why is it that whenever I visit my local audiology department, my hands feel sweaty, my hackles are raised and I have a strong feeling of uncertainty?
It’s because I feel an audiology department – for a deaf person – should be a place of safety and calm – purely because the staff who work there meet deaf people every day.
So, surely they should know how to communicate with us? Surely it should be a very stress-free experience?
But is it? No, it’s the opposite!
When I visit my doctor or my dentist, I go with a sense of reality. I know that the experience will be a bit hit and miss, and I am prepared for it.
The receptionist may be a bit difficult to understand, the computer system may not be working that shows your name or maybe the doctor may be a new one with no experience of talking to a deaf person. But I adjust my expectations so that I am prepared for any eventuality.
But the audiology department? Every time I go, the overriding feeling I leave with is one of disappointment.
I hope and pray that there may be an audiologist who can sign a bit, will speak clearly (without having to be asked to), and will tap me on the shoulder when they want my attention.
But I am constantly disappointed and angry when I leave (a bit like when I go to the cinema and find the captions aren’t working!!)
I have been to the audiology clinic twice in the last week, the first time to see the consultant and the second visit to the technician to fix a broken hearing aid.
The consultant always looks wary when he sees me because he knows that I will ask him awkward questions. In short, I make him work hard to communicate clearly with me (on purpose, why should I have to do all the work!?) but also his attitude stinks.
As a result of me having Pendred Syndrome, I have progressive hearing loss. So before, I was severely deaf, and now I am profoundly deaf.
In the audiologist’s eyes, it’s like I am on the scrap heap. For someone who has lost some useful hearing that I used a lot, I do grieve a bit for that bit of loss.
Do I get any empathy from my consultant?? Do I heck!
Basically, when I enquire about updated hearing aids, I am told that a cochlear implant is the only useful option.
I then ask for a hearing test, he tells me there is no point, but when I insist I want one, he dismissively says he’ll let me have a hearing test, but it’ll be “for my intellectual curiosity only”.
I explain to him that having a CI is a huge step, a big operation but also it has a huge impact on my family and work life so it is a big step to consider. I get a shrug in return!
In contrast, a few months ago, I had a full thyroid removal. In the months leading to the operation, I had many appointments with the consultant and the surgeon.
My options were clearly explained, they booked interpreters for my appointments so I would have full access and so on. They were empathetic, patient and understanding when I asked countless questions. What a contrast to my audiologist.
The audiology technician is another story.
I asked for a hearing test, I got a big sigh.
I asked for a new mould, another big sigh.
No smiles. No speaking clearly. Talking to my back, so I can’t lipread or hear that he’s talking to me. Looking irritated when I don’t understand. Looking at his watch.
How demeaning is this?
I want to know what happens when audiologists have their training?
My GP told me that when they have their training, they have a one day workshop with a deaf adult, learning some signs. They also have to have a conversation with a deaf adult.
But for audiologists, I wonder how much contact they have with deaf people while they are training? Are they taught sign? Are they taught deaf awareness?
It feels to me that they are trained to look inside the ear only. But for a deaf person, it needs to be a holistic experience.
They need to look at the whole deaf person, their background, their feelings about their deafness and be aware of cultural differences. Not just whether a hearing aid or a CI will do the job.
So I will continue to be the “difficult” patient for my audiologists. I have had 44 years of them and the only ones that I have met who sign are the ones who work in schools with deaf children.
I have never met one who can sign in a hospital …yet.
My consultant wants to transfer me from the Leeds borough to the Bradford borough, I think he wants to get rid of me (!) but until then, I will continue to be a thorn in his side and make him work harder at his job and to become better.
Audiologists need to be so much better. Don’t they?
Tell us what you think below in the comments!
Jimmy Hughes
August 28, 2017
I’ve got trust issues with Limping Chicken . Why have you posted this again? Have you run out of eggs to lay ?
Editor
August 28, 2017
It’s a bank holiday, like on weekends we post a previous article. We’ve been doing this for the last 3-4 years so it’s not new!
Worsley
August 28, 2017
Unfortunately I totally agree as a profoundly deaf person. It is a disappointment to experience the lack of empathy and understanding from audiology departments. A receptionist called my name for my appointment but because I didn’t hear her( I wonder why that was?…) I missed my appointment time.
I’ve had nurses shout my name from down a corridor, they look exasperated after shouting many times, poor things, because they are aware Ive checked in.
Doctors, Consultants, Nurses seem to forget I’m deaf. I’ve been told I don’t look deaf, or that they would never of know I was deaf, the latter was recently from a Nurse!
It all stems from deafness being an invisible disability. It doesn’t matter how many text books have been studied, to understand the needs of deaf or deafened people I think a helpful education would be to wear ear-plugs or headphones in different environments so fully understand what CANNOT be heard.
On receipt of hearing therapy I’ve been told numerous times to tell people and keep telling people. Doesn’t that make sense?, yes it does, but I feel that piece of advice quite condescending. Why should we have to keep repeating ourselves. We are the deafened ones, not them!
Rosie Malezer
August 28, 2017
Audiologists (I have had my fair share of their arrogance and assumptions) are there to assess your level of Deafness…. AND to FIX that. They do not accept the fact that Deaf is normal. They refuse to accept that Deaf is okay. They will drill into your head multiple times each visit that it is a “retarded” state of being, that you are NOT normal, that people will not be able to, nor will be willing to communicate with you. They will even threaten you with DEPORTATION if you refuse to have surgery for a CI so that you will hear. But I stood my ground, refused the surgery, learned sign language from Dr Bill Vicars, and she “diagnosed” me as “retarded” and irrational. Since that day, I have never, for a single moment, trusted any Audiology Department staff, nor I have I trusted any ENR surgeons.
I am Deaf. I am happy. I function well in society and even publish my own (and other people’s) books for a living. I have a purpose. I do good for others. Audiologists…. they aspire to have a purpose… but never will. They thrive on instilling sadness, fear and lost hope into the hearing parents of Deaf children, advising them that the ONLY option is to do surgery on their head and make them hear. Audiologists are the epitome of audism and intolerance in a Deaf world.
themarkeraddict
August 29, 2017
My audiologist was similar until I got a complete oxymoron: a deaf audiologist. Now I understand everything he says and he gives me way more options!
Hartmut Teuber
August 30, 2017
I have met several audiologists in the US who quit the profession after encountering Deafies. One influential even turned an oral program to include sign language and have the whole staff and volunteers learn sign language.
Alas, too many have been trained to think and practice their profession along the lines “Every human being ought to hear.”, “To be unable to hear is less human”. The former president of the German association of ENT professionals even wrote and said several times “A biological biped gains humanity if he can or learns to hear and speak”.