But wearing hearing aids means you have PERFECT HEARING SO THEREFORE THERE IS NO REASON WHY YOU CANNOT HEAR EVERY SINGLE WORD I YELL AT YOU IN YOUR EAR! IF YOU STILL MISS OUT ON WHAT I AM SAYING, YOU ARE STUPID!
Sorry... but honestly, that is what uneducated people think of those that wear hearing aids. They don't understand "dead zones." So you are still "deaf" if you have dead zones. Hearing impaired have a cultural meaning of "amplified perfect hearing."
This reply was so good, I decided it deserved a thread of it's own!
Hearing aids aren't like glasses for those with losses in the severe to profound ranges. Even with maximum amplification, I can't be aided to normal except in the lowest frequencies where my loss isn't so deep. Then there's the quality issue. It does sound normal to me since I have nothing better to compare to. But I do know I can't understand speech perfectly and even with reading lips, im only up to 80%. You also stand correct about cochlear dead zones. No HA can help if you have no residual hearing. Transposition is great for some people, even cochlear implants can be great if 100% of your cochlea is just one big dead zone and all you get is vibrotactile responses with HAs.
From a slideshow ive seen, those with mild losses function quite well unaided and HAs only give a slight improvement. Many don't bother much or at all with HAs due to the inconviences/hassles/cost of HAs. They hear way better than almost anyone with CI.
Those with moderate losses hear little speech and only louder sounds unaided. But aided with the proper HAs programmed properly they can be amplified down to the 0-10db range and hear comparable to a hearing person hearing unaided at 10-20db which is on the lower range of normal hearing.
Severe losses hear no speech and only the loudest sounds unaided. With powerful HAs, they hear similar to someone with an unaided mild loss, but often still hear better than those with CI. They should hear in the 10-30db range when fully aided. This is the case for me in the low frequencies where my loss is severe.
The worst losses are profound losses They are deaf unaided and even aided, the best they hear is usually no better than 30db. With powerful HAs, they hear aided similar to what those with moderate losses hear unaided! A CI can sometimes be of benefit for those with losses exceeding 100db.
Those opting to get cochlear implants hear aided what those with mild, moderate or severe losses hear unaided according to that slideshow. However from what ive seen, almost everyone with CI hears better than an unaided severe loss and most in fact hear better than an unaided moderate loss. They also point out that CI is an option for those with total losses(no residual hearing) that way you don't risk hearing worse than HAs and you aren't risking any residual hearing because youve got none!
Think of it as the analogy to someone with profound, pathological myopia. The eye is badly enlongated and misshapen and the retina stretched out and damaged. He may be corrected to perhaps 20/40 at best with many having mild low vision of perhaps 20/100 with the best glasses.