kokonut
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It's all relative. If hearing aids allow him to perform a job that pays 70K a year and without the aids he can't do the same job, then it might be worth it to him.
If you have the skills to perform a job that pays 70K with or without HA, then maybe not.
If you don't have the skills for such a job, then almost certainly not worth it.
Quite relative. Indeed. It's not always about a job (but that's a big factor, too) but everything else that makes wearing a hearing aid worthwhile (for me that is) such as playing ragtime piano, using telephones to talk with anybody, holding conversations with people around you, listening to music and talk radio shows, and so on. To me, if there were only a few hearing aids brands of good caliber and quality that cost around $10,000, I'd buy it. There wouldn't be any hesitancy on my part. No different from those who find spending $60,000 on a cochlear implant or spending $30,000 for an Esteem Envoy implantable hearing device be worthwhile to have. Just because one cannot use a hearing aid beneficially doesn't mean other people cannot and would not buy one of that price if given the opportunity. Quite the contrary. Even at $10,000 I'd consider that as a bargain when one sees the tradeoffs.
My last digital hearing aid lasted 13 years which turned out to be the equivalent of about $13 bucks a month. I don't look at the big price picture like many do but what I can get out of it over a stretch of several years and the return benefits I get out of it.