Are
your older adults experiencing hearing loss? Their life could be at risk
Hearing loss can impact personal relationships, physical
health, and a person’s overall quality of life.
Hearing Loss Can Lead to Lower
Quality Relationships
A number of studies have shown that
hearing loss can negatively impact personal relationships. Older adults with
hearing loss may withdraw from conversations because they can’t understand what
is being said, or they might talk more to compensate for their inability to
hear. It can cause them to monopolize conversations without truly interacting
with others.
In one
study of 4,000 people with hearing difficulties those who didn’t
wear hearing aids were “more likely to be viewed as being confused,
disoriented, non-caring, arrogant, [and] inattentive” by family members and
loved ones.
Additionally, the same study
discovered that “interpersonal warmth in relationships significantly declined
as hearing loss worsened.”
While these side effects may not
directly affect an older adult’s independence, they can lead to depression. We
now know depression can worsen other illnesses or even lead to new problems,
such as heart disease and high blood pressure.
Ultimately, these illnesses can reduce
a person’s ability to live independently.
Hearing Loss Can Put Older Adults in
Danger
But it’s not just an older adult’s
mental well-being that can suffer. Seniors with untreated hearing loss can put
themselves in physical danger if they:
- Fail to hear a doctor’s instructions properly and don’t take the right dose of prescription medicine
- Can’t sense danger around them
- Don’t hear someone knocking at the door or even hear an intruder in the house at night
- Are driving and don’t hear another driver honk the horn
- Are walking and fail to take note of oncoming traffic
How Hearing Loss Affects Quality of
Life
An older adult who can’t be trusted
to take the correct medicine, cannot drive safely, or finds it hard to socialize
with groups of people risks a lower quality of life and loss of independence.
Hearing loss can create a cascading
effect that leads to other health issues but, even on its own, it puts seniors
at risk in their own homes and while traveling.
Fortunately, in many cases the use
of a hearing aid can restore the quality of life and the ability to live
independently.
Give your aged parents the gift of
hearing and they will forever be thankful.
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