Anij
Well-Known Member
- Joined
- Jun 14, 2005
- Messages
- 2,340
- Reaction score
- 53
Been there done that....
What you buy for hearing aids has to be your decision since you're wearing them. If you don't expect much, or want much or care much about the quality of hearing then really it's an easy purchase. In that case, if the low ends are working for you and it's not breaking the bank, than that's what you should continue to do.
However, if you value things such as clarity of speech, TV, Music, nature or language study, then you need to look at the high end. I "saved" too when I bought my first digitals and I'll never make that mistake again. Thank God when I'm able to make another purchase, I'll be able to get the insurance coverage for part of it....
Laura
When I got mine - entry level was all I could possibly afford.
Also, because of my specific type of HL and the APD both my audiologist and I were uncertain as to how beneficial the HA would actually be, how much I'd use it and if I'd need to convert it to a BiCROS HA ... for all those reasons the MAXX was what we made the educated choice to get for me.
Had either of us had known the difference it would make or now much I'd end up wearing it we would have looked at higher end models and I would have waited another year so I could save up for it.
My choice certainly wasn't made because I "didn't care" how I heard etc and it wasn't an easy choice (because we had a LOT of unusual variables to consider when fitting me). We made the best choice we could at that time. I don't regret getting the HA, I just wish we'd had additional (yet impossible) knowledge about my fitting needs.