Follow
Share
Read More
This question has been closed for answers. Ask a New Question.
Find Care & Housing
1 2 3 4
My mother wears her hearing aids since her closest friend laid down the law. This friend has had part of a lung removed and it makes it hard for her to speak loudly. She told my mother she would have to limit her visits to 10 to 15 minutes as long as my mother refused the hearing aids, because it exhausted her to shout. My mother was shocked to realize that she was inconveniencing other people, and when it was put that way, her good manners took over. Now she wears the hearing aids every day. It's a blessing to us all.

By the way: as mother ages, it's harder and harder for her to do manual tasks that require coordination. The staff at her ALF now put the hearing aids in for her every morning, recharge the batteries at night, and so on. She really couldn't do it herself but hated to admit it If you can convince your parent to let someone help, it may make the difference.
Helpful Answer (2)
Report

Deb, I just had to laugh! "I don't want to" is the all-purpose sure-fire discussion-stopper, isn't it? Getting out of someone WHY they don't want to in hopes that there will be some myth you can bust for them is a very difficult endeavor. I can't tell you how many times we had to go there with my Mom - sometimes she was in pain and would not tell unless you asked EXACTLY the right way. Once, it was pretty serious, she was screaming out at night and they thought it was just usual for her, but I knew it wasn't...she got some medical attention that didn't turn up much of anything...and she finally ended up in a local emergency room, where she finally revealed that she just thought the place was dark and spooky and it got her scared. Moving to a new place solved the problem, but unfortunately the ER visit determined she'd actually had a small heart attack. I've had families refuse to get wheelchairs even though they are carrying a 50+ pound child nearly everyhwere, because they think getting a wheelchair causes someone to stop walking, and not the other way around. I suppose the trick is to somehow reduce the apparent threatening nature of the whole thing and then maybe you might get the answer, e.g., "Mom, you never have to get a hearing aid if you don't want one - but hey, just curious, why don't you want one?? I'd really doubt lack of motivation or lack of caring would be the issue from what you describe. I wish you the best!
Helpful Answer (0)
Report

I have hearing loss as well. It's not significant at this point, but starting to be noticable. My mother wears hearing aids from the moment she gets up until she goes to bed at night. Why haven't I? Simple. Cost. I go with my mother when she goes in to hers adjusted, when she goes to the audiologist, and when she had to have one replaced because the dog ate it. Replacement cost for one? $2500. She was lucky, she had insurance that covered part of that cost. But I certainly cannot afford to pay $5000 for hearing aids. Not gonna happen. My husband is working, but I've been unemployed and staying at home taking care of Mom for almost 3 years now. We get by, but don't have money for that kind of expense. We have health insurance, but it doesn't cover hearing aids. I've thought about those hearing amplification systems you can get online for a couple hundred bucks, but frankly, I'm afraid it's only going to make my hearing loss worse. My husband has very sensitive hearing, so my mother and I both use the tv ears to watch tv, that way my husband can keep it at a reasonable level for him (which is almost inaudible for most humans.
Helpful Answer (1)
Report

Realtime, I had no idea all of that was involved in wearing a hearing aid. Maybe that's why my mother won't get one -- she has very bad arthritis. Usually she DOES have her reasons, but she doesn't like to tell people what they are. Also, it could be the cost. My mother used to work at one of those hearing aid places that runs the big ads in the newspaper -- maybe she thinks they're a load of crap. Well, I get really exhausted repeating myself around her. I wish she knew how much!!!
Helpful Answer (1)
Report

I would try talking to her in questions rather than statements. For instance, say mom whats going to happen when the fire alarm goes off and you can't hear it? why does it bother you to wear a hearing aid? If she says because I dont need one, say well the doctor has told you that you do so why is it that you don't believe him? When you ask questions it's not as confrontational and she should take it better than telling her something and trying to make her do something. If that doesn't work then maybe try making her write a tally every time she says pardon me for one day and then say just to compare lets put your hearing aid in just for one day and have her tally how many times she says pardon with it in. Tell her that after those 2 days, if she doesn't say pardon me with her hearing aid out more times than with it in than you won't bug her about wearing it. Ask her to prove you wrong. Say it very sweet though not in a smartellic way. haha.
Helpful Answer (2)
Report

I read all of these stories with great interest. Have any of you had any experience with trying to talk to the HOH on the telephone? Have you had any success with amplified phones or the ones that print out the message?

My mother cannot hear us, even if we are sitting feet away. I have given up trying to carry on a conversation with her.
Helpful Answer (0)
Report

@Chicago1954
My 95 year old Mom has had hearing aids for about 18 months now. She refused to get them for a long time saying that others she knew who had them didn't like them. Having them has made her life and ours so much better! I think what finally convinced her to try them was when my husband's mother and sister were visiting and she felt they had ignored her. I explained that they weren't ignoring her, they just knew that she couldn't hear them and didn't want to yell out everything they were saying.

For the phone, we have a Clarity W425 Pro. Then I plug in a corded earbud with microphone and put that in her good ear. She is able to carry on a conversation on the phone with this set up. Just using the phone alone doesn't work for her due to her head and hand tremors. She can't hold the phone still enough to be able to hear.

Best wishes with your Mom. If you're in the Chicago area, I would highly recommend Dr Jing at the Hearing Health Center on Raymond in Naperville. He was awesome with my Mom and her head tremor didn't bother him a bit. :)
Helpful Answer (2)
Report

My mom seems to be able to hear well on the phone. And sometimes she can hear you when you are talking to her. It just occurred to me though that with her strange personality, she is kind of a nonstop talker and she does most of the talking anyway!! Maybe she is so used to hogging the conversations that it doesn't occur to her that she can't hear the other person. I always felt that she never listened to me anyway (even when she had excellent hearing, like an owl or something)
Helpful Answer (1)
Report

Same problem here. I gave up, just started speaking louder and slower. The problem now is Mom's aide doesn't speak or understand English that well, so I have to teach her how to talk to Mom. She is a sweetheart and I don't want to lose her. So we make adjustments and live with it. I've go more important things to worry about. So just accept the things you can not change. It made my life a lot easier. Big hugs out to you all.
Helpful Answer (0)
Report

Welcome to the club Karen. I have the same problem with my husband. He does not wear them. I met his audiologist whom I happen to know and asked her to tell him to wear them. She told me a lot of wives ask her the same thing and one woman even told hubby she would divorce him if he didn't put them in
Helpful Answer (1)
Report

Current update: Mom's dementia is now considerably worse. She is between stage 5 and stage 6 now. Sadly? ..her hearing loss is the least of our worries now. I really wish all of you the best. It was VERY difficult (and selfish truly) when she refused to wear them but was cognizant enough to know she should.
Helpful Answer (1)
Report

With my mother it was purely a question of vanity "they don't look nice" (always the supreme narcissist), even though they're barely noticeable - she's been in a NH the past year (Parkinsons, dementia) where most of the residents don't notice much at all. She had a stroke four weeks ago, can't sit up by herself, can barely speak, eats next to nothing and says the same thing or asks the same question over and over again. She's deemed palliative so I guess it's just a matter of time before she passes. I visit once or twice a week to make sure she has all she needs and it's totally unhinging.
Helpful Answer (1)
Report

My mother does this too and I think it just started recently because it's as annoying as hell. I tried dating an older man about a month ago, and he did this, and I didn't last a week with him (there were other things too, but this is so hard to be around). It has quickly become a habit with my mother, she doesn't even let me finish a sentence without bleating, Huh? If it were pardon, I think I could stand it, but the constant huhs are driving me nuts. If I ever get like this and act so stubbornly about it, I hope someone shoots me.
Helpful Answer (0)
Report

There are some new hearing aides that the audiologist sticks right in the ears and changes them every three months. Patient can't remove them. I have the same problem with my hubby and spoke to the audiologist and she said many of her patients don't bother to use them, Those damm things cost $2000 each!!!!!!!!
Helpful Answer (0)
Report

Your mother needs to sit with my mother and they can say "Huh?" "What was that?", "pardon me?", "I didn't hear you.." to each other all day long!

My parents moved in with me about 8 months ago and I sometimes think I'm going to lose my mind with the repeating myself.. I love my parents so much - but my patience are wearing thin.. My mother 75 has not even gotten to the doctor yet for the hearing aids. (We are going next month)..

She is one of those people that want to know what's going on and involved in the conversation. I really think she will be so much happier if she could hear what everyone is saying.

Not to mention everyone has to talk over the blasting TV all day & night..

One of the most annoying is when I'm talking to my son, husband or on my phone and she says "Huh"? "I'm not talking to you Mom..." Then I feel bad..

That's the worst part... I do feel bad because I get so short with her sometimes and don't mean to make her feel bad or upset.

God Love them all.. Thanks for posting - good to know we're not alone!
Helpful Answer (1)
Report

My mother is also 78 and stubborn about wearing her hearing aids. They are collecting dust in her cabinet. I am si sick of repeating myself and her telling me i never told her things of importance. I walk in her house and the t.v. is on 95. How can a person not realize they have a problem when they have the t.v. up that loud? God help us all!
Helpful Answer (0)
Report

My mother constantly fusses about her hearing aid, but she does wear them. She heard about the study that found that people with hearing loss are more likely to get dementia. This was true of her dad, who would get angry and take his aids out. He also had dementia by the time he was 79.
I also tell my mother that I will not even attempt to talk to her when she does not have them in. She will ask me questions, without them in, and then cannot hear anything I say. This is very irritating. Getting the silent treatment by other family members is usually enough to do the trick.
Helpful Answer (1)
Report

My husband often doesn't hear me because he's in another room or won't wear his hearing aids. I get so frustrated repeating myself. One thing I do is that, if he asks me a question from another room and I only hear part of it, I don't get up and go to him. I wait for him to come to me if it's important enough to him.
I'm not supposed to ask if he has his hearing aids in or not. I ask anyway, or visually check his ears. If he's in the same room and I can't hear him, I say so or ignore him until he speaks clearly. Often he must turn his TV down before I can hear him.
If I want to ask him something, I go to him and sit in front of him to get his attention first before I speak. That works very well.
When we're talking and I respond to him only to hear or see him leaving the room, I just stop talking and forget about what I wanted to say. Obviously I've lost my audience.
So in summary, I don't cater to his poor communication acts and do my best to help communication when I initiate it.
Helpful Answer (1)
Report

I wish I could answer this because it's exactly the problem I'm having with my husband. And, YES, it does put a huge strain on our relationship.
Helpful Answer (0)
Report

I had my mom's hearing tested though she protested. I was visiting from away for a short period of time. I am the oldest daughter and I wear hearing aids. So does my Dad. One day outside, I lost one of my hearing aids and despite being on hands and knees never found it. I ended up buying a different pair from the same company that my husband used. Instead of donating my other pair after I replaced the hearing aid, I thought about my mother. She hates to spend money, so I thought that maybe she would wear my old ones. My nephew-in-law was even a sales/adjuster person for these type of aids. They are the ones that hardly show. Since she was fitted with them, they have remained on the kitchen table. She refuses to wear them with her excuse that she doesn't want to depend on them. After reading the above comments, I don't feel so alone. My Dad is 89 and Mom is 85. Life would be so much nicer for both of them if she acted less like a child. When I called home one time, I wanted to talk to Dad first to ask him if she was wearing them. He said no. When I mentioned them to her, she responded, I wondered when you were going to ask about them. I think that she wants the attention. What do you think?
Helpful Answer (1)
Report

I get gibberish back....I would LOVE to hear "huh?"....what I get, when I ask if mine needs more to eat is "alabamy making beat?" "DO YOU WANT MORE TO EAT?" "oh, I was close, eat, beat" ALL DAY. I said I am not going to cook unless the headset for the TV was on, and if they want to pay for take out every day, they can blast the TV all they want. ....funny, the headset became a money saving device......when that happened, I was like. huh? something worked? yeah, frustrating..........
Helpful Answer (1)
Report

Any, even small amount, of physical Activity must occur first, before communicating anything - even something simple,
Get their COMPLETE attention before saying anything of relevance,
Make a game of "what did I say?" to have them repeat it or just paraphrase - this is key and must happen before moving on,
Then, "put your hearing aid in now, thank you",
Then wait.
Until they do.

This is a ritual that you must carry out diligently, every time, even for the simplest of communications, until, one day soon, they will put the hearing aid in as a habit, the moment you walk into the room or shout from another room.

I dont know why this works.

It works.
Helpful Answer (2)
Report

My father has Vascular dementia and hearing loss. He will grudgingly wear his hearing aids but complains about them. He only wears them for 5 minutes and takes them out and puts them in his pocket or on the table or under his pillow, etc. I don't believe he is doing it on purpose but finds something odd in his ears and removes them. I put them back in but, presto, they are out in a flash. I am at a loss because he will agree with me about wearing them, but never does.
Helpful Answer (0)
Report

So glad to have found this sight. My mother's hearing has gotten worse through the years and she was tested several years ago. At that time she had lost over 50 percent in one ear and more in the other. She too has every reason in the book to not get one. I really believe she thinks it's a sign that she is old and she doesn't want anyone thinking, much less knowing how old she is. What she fails to understand is that when she can't hear what people are saying and she thinks they have said something they haven't, this is a sure sign you are old and can't hear! She says we mumble and to speak clearly. It's a sad situation for everyone involved, the person who can't hear and the ones that have to repeat everything. Most people just say forget it and won't keep repeating it. I feel sorry for her and everyone else involved. Her answer is , "Well just don't talk to me." I finally told her the other day, I would like to have a conversation with her, I miss that, but I too get frustrated with repeating everything. I'm at my wits end!!!
Helpful Answer (1)
Report

It's about PRIDE. Most people will get reading glasses without too much resistance - but they really "balk" at the idea of needing hearing aids, even when it need is quite obvious. I've never quite understood why a person would "choose" to go around half deaf when they can "choose" to get hearing aids and only be slightly deaf.
Helpful Answer (1)
Report

"Mom, when I'm here, I will only talk to you with your hearing aids in."

Then follow through.

Or, when she talks to you, say,"Pardon?" Keep doing it until she puts the hearing aids in.

Neither way is very "nice" buy it may work.
Helpful Answer (1)
Report

I can relate to all of the answers here! My mother is 86 and has had hearing loss for a long time (years) but still screams that her hearing is "perfect" when I suggest a hearing test. I have stopped speaking to her in a normal volume because I'm so sick of repeating myself. I just start out by speaking in a louder volume than normal. She still says "What? I didn't hear you." When I then raise my voice even louder, she cringes and looks like she's been startled. Her doctor told her she needed a hearing evaluation as part of a complete geriatric assessment. She resisted and I told her that I wouldn't be calling her on the phone until she got some help with her hearing. I was having to yell into the phone every time, as loud as I could, and she would still say "You're turning your face away from the phone when you speak." Or, "There's something wrong with my phone. I can't hear you." Or, "There's something wrong with your phone." And, my favorite: "I don't have this problem when other people call me." That's because no one else calls her because she can't hear them. She did go to the ENT clinic and they did find wax blockage in one ear, with a possible infection. Now, we have to go back after that ear clears up so she can have the hearing test. To avoid having my blood pressure soar, and possibly have a stroke or heart attack, I decided to stop rep[eating myself. I will be using pen and paper to communicate with her from now on. I like the idea of a wipe board too. If the doctor prescribes hearing aids, she will resist getting them. If she gets them, she will lose them the first day. She is visually impaired and cannot see small things on the floor or table among all the other "necessary" stuff on every square inch of surface in her house. Yes, I am very frustrated, but I refuse to argue and struggle with her about anything any more. Every single suggestion is met with the comment "Everyone wants to tell me what to do." It's about control, loss of independence, and "I'm the parent and you're the child." Well, this child is 67 and not willing to have a heart attack trying to help her any more.
Helpful Answer (2)
Report

Has anyone tried letting their parent read this website? I am going to do that on my next visit to mom. I think it might help for her to read that there are other people saying the same thing she does. Like she can’t hear me because I’m mumbling and when I speak louder, she says don’t holler at her! Mom also needs to hear how other family members are feeling the same frustration that her family members feel. Although I must admit one of my favorite suggestions was to ask if the reason your not wearing your hearing aid is due to pride....then so be it ....BUT if you’re going to keep your pride then I’m going to keep my “SANITY” and I’m not repeating myself or raise my voice. And don’t tell it to them....write it down or better yet type it on your tablet and make the font nice and BIG (so no glasses are necessary). Then SMILE!
Helpful Answer (0)
Report

I'm so pleased to have found this sight and realise that it's not just me and my mother with this problem. My mother is 87 and has had deteriorating hearing for several years. She's had several hearing tests and been given 6 different pairs of hearing aids because each time she tries a new one she says it irritates her ears and she can't wear them. She gets very down and lonely and stops wanting to go to functions and family gatherings because she can't hear conversations. If I dare to mention hearing aids she gets very angry with me. I'm not sure what she expects me to do if she won't wear them. I did look at the possibility of those ones that can be fitted to specs but apparently they are only suitable for a certain type of hearing loss which I don't think my mother has. Not sure where to go from here and it's only going to get worse. I empathise with her but it's so frustrating that she doesn't want to help herself, it's like she's given up.
Helpful Answer (0)
Report

When my mother was 85, I took her to the doctor to get a hearing aid. As she was trying it out, she said that she could actually hear the toilet paper ripping, something she evidently hadn't heard in a long time. However, it wasn't long before she was saying that her hearing aid blocked her hearing and she refused to wear it. Sometimes she will put it in if I take it to her and simply say, "It's time to put your hearing aid in", but she won't ever put it in of her own accord. Bottom line is-no amount of cajoling and persuading will convince a dementia patient that they have problems. It is impossible to reason with someone who has lost the ability to reason. There might be less strife if the people living with her just accept her condition and realize that her mind is no longer capable of understanding. Once I realized this about my mother, I was a whole lot less frustrated. The best I can do is continue to research dementia and Alzheimers and try to decrease my own risks of getting them. Also, as a caregiver, take much-needed breaks by getting away from the dementia patient. Go to lunch with another family member or a friend. These are some ways that I cope with my mother and father having dementia. Hope this helps.
Helpful Answer (2)
Report

1 2 3 4
This question has been closed for answers. Ask a New Question.
Ask a Question
Subscribe to
Our Newsletter