ecp
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- Dec 13, 2004
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Hello!
My youngest daughter who just turned 6 months old was diagnosed at 3 weeks with moderate to moderately severe bilateral sensorineural hearing loss. Her diagnosis came in the midst of an international move (military family going to be overseas up to 2 years). We currently call Cairo, Egypt home. She has had hearing aids since she was 3 months. The first month we were not 100% compliant but we wore it as much as se could tolerate it which, some days was no more than 2 hours. Today she wears them 8 to 12 hours a day. My question/confusion is about early intervention. When we initially were given her diagnosis we tried to get "early intervention" while we were in the states and were basically told she was "too young" for meaningful therapy and that we could get similar results by just letting her wear the hearing aids and just talking to her. She is now 6 months very interactive and responsive to sound. We see an audiologist here but an English speaking speech therapist is hard to find here and I am trying to figure out if I shou,d pack up the family and head back to the states or will I be able to hang in there with instructional videos and YouTube? I am trying to balance meeting my youngest daughter developmental needs with keeping our family together. I also have a 3 year old and I am hesitant to make a drastic move because there have been so much change for her in the last 6 months (new sister, new home, new school, new culture, new language, etc.). Any advice would be appreciated.
Thanks in advance
First, your daughter is very lucky to have such a wonderful family!
Secondly, try to find a good audiologist near you in Egypt. There should be many who speak English fluently. They will help keep your daughter's hearing aids and earmolds up to date which will reduce annoying feedback issues and make wearing hearing aids much easier for your whole family.
You say your daughter has moderately severe hearing loss. That sounds bad but it means she has a significant amount of residual hearing. Check out page 15 of this (http://www.handsandvoices.org/pdf/mainst_cal.pdf). It describes the long term implications of various degrees of hearing loss.
It is awesome that you want to incorporate sign into your daughter's language development!
I get annoyed that hearing babies are allowed to sign "baby sign" but hard of hearing or deaf babies are forbidden from signing (which means they are forbidden from communicating).
Your daughter has a loving family, an informed mother, apporptiate hearing aids (im assuming) and good language examples. She has every opportunity to develop spoken AND sign language fluency.
Using both speech and sign can be beneficial to your daughter and your family but everybody has to be committed to learning ASL.
Language immersion, whatever language it is, is paramount.