Audiofuzzy
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Polish deaf had it hard during socialist. they fled as soon as they could.
Fuzzy
Fuzzy
btw I believe nobody got it better than USA and Canada deaf. not even Europe.
Fuzzy
founder of AGBELL:" said:"in the proceeding chapters i have shown that sexual selection is at work amongst the Deaf and dumb, tending to produce a Deaf variety of the human race.
those who believe as i do, that the production of a defective race of human beings would be a great calamity to the world, will examine carefully the causes that lead to the intermarriage of Deaf with object of applying a remedy"
yes around 45% refuse and or reject the technology..that's not a very high success rate..so they keep expanding the market and moving the goal post to get more drilled into...
In the last 10-20 years, how much has that number changed (those that reject the technology)?
that number is from 2008,
Then what is it today? What was it prior to 2008? You mention a lot about how the CI industry is eradicating the deaf culture so I assume you would be able to answer that?
you asked me a question re the numbers for those who are rejecting CI, and i provided it for the year it was measured anyway.
that is a very different question then the one regarding the eradication for Deaf culture
are you asking me a number for the eradication for Deaf culture then i have already posted numbers for the time frame 2000-2008 in regards to ASL in Deaf schools, and orla only education and mainstream in that time bracket
My aunt's CI failed, she asked about having it removed...while they could do it it was considered elective at the time and the recovery would be similar to the original surgery...Hi, I just had a Med El CI put in two weeks ago with hopes to gain some hearing and relief from my terrible tinnitus. I have NF2. For those who don't know what that is, it's a genetic disease that the hallmark of it is bilateral vestibular schwannomas (acoustic neuromas). I had my left side's tumor debulked last summer, and went deaf. The first Surgeon said he kept the auditory nerve intact and that my face and hearing would be back to normal in 6 months. No such thing. He was so unfamilar with NF2. Anyways, now I'm being treated at Mayo in MN by a team that is well-acquainted with NF2, as it's very rare. I was told I was an excellent candidate for a CI, and the Med El specifically, because I wouldn't need remove it for MRIs, which I will be getting at least once a year for the rest of my life. I'm 36 by the way.
Anyways, I went in for activation yesterday, and nothing. Today we went 4 times the volume for each of the 11-12channels, and went 'live' and cranked it up t 120. I was told that people usually get sound at 15-30. Anyways, it's a failure. My nerve was too far gone. It's a big bummer, as I was really excited and pushing for this all spring, now I have all this stuff in my head with nothing to show for it.
Has anyone had one removed due to failure? The audiologist said the ENT(surgeon) probably would say keep it in, but I'm not fond of the implant disc above my ear...especially if it's not functioning.
When I have to deal with my other tumor, we'd most likely put an ABI in during tumor resection. I'm told when that happens, due to the nature of NF2 tumors, I would be left completely deaf, and I've accepted that someday I will be. Anyways, my main question is if anyone has had one removed...
Thanks in advance,
Mar
This surgery failed because her auditory nerve on that side was damaged by the tumour/surgery to get it out. She's intending to have an ABI on the other sound which bypasses the auditory nerve and is attached to the brain stem. It offers perception of sound rather than speech intelligibility.
I hope your insurance covers it. Do you think you'd go for the ABI? Would need MRIs after the second side was operated on?