professional who studies and tests for hearing disorders through identification and evaluation of hearing loss and the rehabilitation of hearing loss.
One who holds a degree and/or certification in audiology, and whose specific interest is in identification, measurement, and rehabilitation of persons with hearing impairments.(children, his/her hearing, one who does examination)
a specialist who identifies, measures and studies hearing and hearing impairments
a clinical hearing care specialist who has a minimum of a Master's degree, is board-certified by the American Speech-Language and Hearing Association, and licensed by the State Department of Education. The audiologist determines if a person (infant, child, or adult) has a hearing loss, the type of hearing loss it is, and how the remaining hearing can best be used. If the person is a hearing aid candidate, the audiologist selects and fits the most appropriate aids, teaches their effective use, and monitors progress to verify that maximum benefit has been obtained.
A licensed and/or certified professional trained and measure hearing loss and rehabilitate those with hearing and speech issues.
Qualified audiologists are university graduates with postgraduate qualifications in audiology or equivalent training. A minimum of 12 months' supervised clinical practice in audiology is also required. Audiologists have broad responsibilities and expertise in all non-medical areas of hearing services including complex hearing assessment and rehabilitation of hearing impairment (which includes hearing aid prescription, fitting and management).
Specialist in the non-medical diagnosis and management of hearing disorders.
A university-trained professional with a masterís (MS or MA), doctorate (PhD or EdD) or Doctor of Audiology (AuD) degree in audiology. The audiologist is responsible for assessing hearing and for providing rehabilitative services to increase the ability of people with hearing loss to function more efficiently in everyday life.
A licensed health care practitioner who specializes in the evaluation and rehabilitation of communication disorders associated with hearing loss.
is a hearing specialist trained to test hearing.
Medical professional trained to perform hearing tests using such equipment as an audiometer, fitting and testing the hearing aid, and providing auditory rehabilitation.
a health care professional who is a specialist trained in the evaluation and testing of hearing and hearing loss and related disorders.
a person trained in the science of hearing and hearing impairments; they can administer tests and help in the rehabilitation of hearing-impaired people.
A qualified professional with a minimum of a master's level degree. An audiologist receives training for testing hearing strengths and weaknesses, and the prescription, fitting and adjusting of hearing aids and other devices.
a degreed professional (master's level or higher) trained to evaluate hearing loss and prescribe, fit and adjust hearing aids and assistive listening systems
a health care professional who diagnoses and treats disorders of the auditory (hearing) and vestibular (balance) systems
a health care professional with a graduate degree in audiology, licensed by the New York State Education Department
a health care provider who holds a Masters or Doctorate degree in Audiology and who specializes in the habilitation/rehabilitation and clinical evaluation of persons with auditory and vestibular impairments
a health professional who can identify and measure hearing toss
a health professional who conducts a series of tests to determine whether the child has a hearing problem and, if so, the type and severity of that problem
a health professional who determines whether the child has a hearing problem and how severe it is
a health professional with post-graduate training and specializes in hearing evaluation
a hearing care professional, trained specifically in hearing, communication, and balance disorders
a hearing care professional who has a Master's degree in Audiology and specializes in the evaluation and assessment of hearing losses
a hearing health-care professional who has graduate level university training and certification in the evaluation and treatment of hearing, balance, and related disorders
a hearing health care professional who is trained to identify, measure, and rehabilitate hearing impairment and related disorders
a hearing health care professional who specializes in identifying, assessing, preventing, and treating people with hearing impairment
a hearing health care professional who specializes in preventing, identifying, and assessing hearing impairment as well as directing any needed nonmedical rehabilitation
a hearing health professional who identifies and measures hearing loss and
a hearing specialist, trained in a master's or doctoral level university degree program
a highly trained professional who specializes in evaluating and treating people with hearing loss
a licensed, certified specialist with a minimum of a masters degree or clinical doctorate in audiology trained to identify, assess, prevent and treat non-medical hearing disorders
a licensed health care professional who diagnoses, evaluates, and treats hearing disorders and communication problems
a licensed professional who is trained to help patients with hearing and central auditory problems
a Masters or PhD level professional certified by the American Speech-Language and Hearing Association in evaluation, rehabilitation and diagnosis of hearing loss and hearing aid dispensing
an allied health professional specialising in hearing and non-medical management of the auditory and balance systems
an individual with a master's degree or doctorate in Audiology who holds either a
an individual with education and training specific to the study of hearing, specializing in identification, evaluation via diagnostic testing, and rehabilitation of hearing loss
a non-medical healthcare professional specializing in the evaluation and rehabilitation of people with hearing loss
a person who evaluates hearing, assists with amplification systems such as hearing aids, and prevents hearing loss through providing consumer education and fitting protective devices
a person who has a masters or doctoral degree in audiology
a person who specializes in the science of audiology which is the branch of science that deals with hearing and the therapy required for people who have hearing deficits
a professional educated in the study of normal and impaired hearing
a professional hearing specialist who conducts tests and diagnoses hearing problems
a professional holding either a Masters or Doctorate degree in Audiology and specializes in the detection, (re)habilitation and conservation of hearing loss
a professional specializing in prevention, assessment and non-medical management of hearing disorders
a professional specially trained to identify and help people with hearing problems
a professional who diagnoses, treats, and manages individuals with hearing loss or balance problems
a professional who has received a Master's or Doctoral degree from an accredited university graduate program
a professional who knows how to test hearing
a professional who measures the hearing and identifies the type of hearing loss
a professional who specializes in diagnosing and treating hearing loss and balance problems
a professional with a masters or doctorate degree who's trained in the evaluation of hearing
a professional with a minimum of a masters degree, trained to provide services for the identification, assessment, prevention and non-medical treatment of persons who have hearing disorders
a specialist in the diagnosis and non-medical treatment of hearing and balance problems
a specialist who's been trained to understand how hearing works and how to help kids who don't hear normally
a trained professional who specializes in preventions, identification, and assessment of hearing loss
a trained professional who tests hearing and performs hearing evaluation tests that measure the degree of hearing loss and the particular sound frequencies that are impaired
a University trained health care professional who has specialized in the care of your hearing and how it affects the quality of your life
a university-trained hearing specialist
a university-trained professional who specializes in the evaluation and treatment of hearing loss
a person who studies sound and hearing.
A person with a degree, license, and certification in audiology (science of hearing) who measures hearing, identifies hearing loss, and participates in rehabilitation of hearing impairment.
Person skilled in the study of hearing
A professional with a masters degree in audiology. This person measures and evaluates the hearing of people of all ages, provides information with respect to an individual's hearing loss, prescribes hearing aids and assistive listening devices as appropriate, plans habilitation/rehabilitation programs, or refers as necessary. The audiologist does not provide medical services.
healthcare professional with a Master's or Doctoral degree who is qualified to provide services in prevention, evaluation and (re)habilitation of hearing loss and its associated communication disorder.
a certified individual educated at the Master's level, that specializes in hearing loss, balance issues, and other related ear issues.
Professional trained to diagnose hearing losses and auditory problems. ¡@Å¥¤OÀË©w(Audiometry). ¹B¥Î¦UºØÅ¥¤O´úÅç¤è¦¡¡A¥H´ú¶qÓ¤Hťı¯à¤O¡AÄÝ©ó¥Í²zÀˬdªº«n¶µ¥Ø¡C¡@Å¥¤O¿ë§O(Auditory discrimination). Å¥¤O¿ë§O§Y¥¿1/2T¿ë§O¥~¬ÉÁnµ¨ë¿E®t²§ªº¯à¤O¡A³oºØ¯à¤O¦]¤H¦Ó²§¡A¤£¹L¥i¥H¸g¹L3/4A·í°V1/2m¦Óµo´§µ1/2¥Î³Ñ3/4lÅ¥¤Oªº³Ì¤j®ÄªG¡C¡@ťı°V1/2m(Auditory training). ťı°V1/2mªº¥Øªº¬Oµo´§Å¥Ä±¨ü·l¤H¤h³Ñ3/4lÅ¥¤Oªº³Ì¤j®Ä¯à¡A¥ç§Y°V1/2m¥LÌ¥hÅéÅç¡BÃѧO¡BÄÄÄÀ©M3/4ã¦X¤é±`¥Í¬¡¤¤¸g±`±µÄ²ªºÁnµ¡A±q¦Ó´£¤É¥LÌ»¡¸Ü©MŪ¸Üªº¯à¤O¡C¡@»²§U¤Î¥tÃþ·3/4³q(Augmentative and Alternative Communication, AAC). À°§U¦³»Ýn¤H¤h«Ø¥ß«D¤f»y·3/4³q1/4Ò¦¡¡A¥]¬A©Ò¦³·3/4³q1/4Ò¦¡¡G(a)«DɧU»²§U¤u¨ã(unaided forms)¡A¦p²³æªº¤â¶Õ¡Bªí±¡¡B¤â»yµ¥¡F(b)ɧU»²§U¤u¨ãÅé©Ê(aided forms) ¡A¦p·3/4³qªO/ï/¥d¡B¹q¸£¡B¹q¤l/1/4Æ1/2X¥iŪ¦¡¨t²Î¡F¥i¤À¬°¡G(a)1/4ȮɩÊ-¤f»yµo®i¯à¤O¤Î¦Ü´1/4¯àµo®i©Î«ì´_»y¨¥¯à¤O(«e¤w¦³»y¨¥¯à¤O¤§¦¨¤H©Î¨àµ£3/4A¥Î)¡F(b)ªø´Á/¥Ã¤[©Ê¡C
A highly trained health care professional who measures hearing and helps clients with hearing problems, including fitting them for hearing aids.
a medical professional who is specially trained to detect, diagnose, and treat individuals with impaired hearing.
A health care professional trained to evaluate hearing loss and related disorders, including balance (vestibular) disorders and tinnitus, and to rehabilitate people with hearing loss and related disorders. Audiologists use a variety of tests and procedures to assess hearing and balance function and to fit and dispense hearing aids and other assistive devices for hearing loss. Most audiologists have advanced doctorate degrees.
A professional specializing in the study and rehabilitation of hearing, who is certified by the American Speech-Language-Hearing Association or licensed by a state board of examiners.
A health professional with at least a master's degree that studies the sense of hearing, detects and diagnoses hearing loss, and works to help individuals with hearing loss
A specialist who evaluates and provides treatment for people with hearing loss and deafness.
One who evaluates hearing defects and who aids in the rehabilitation of those who have such defects.
a healthcare professional trained to identify and measure hearing impairments and related disorders using a variety of tests and procedures.
a person who specializes in evaluating people with hearing loss Click here to return to the passage.
A professional who specializes in the identification, testing, habilitation, and rehabilitation of hearing loss.
An Audiologist tests a person's hearing, and can recommend ways for persons with hearing loss to deal with those particular challenges.
A person who is qualified to assess a person's hearing and provide interventions to improve it.
therapists who work with people with hearing difficulties
An audiologist deals with ear problems, including hearing loss, tinnitus (ringing in the ears or "head noise") and lack of balance. Audiologists provide hearing aids and other listening devices.
A health professional who studies tests for and detects hearing loss.
health care professional who is trained to evaluate hearing loss and related disorders, including balance (vestibular) disorders and tinnitus, and to rehabilitate individuals with hearing loss and related disorders. An audiologist uses a variety of tests and procedures to assess hearing and balance function and to fit and dispense hearing aids and other assistive devices for hearing.
Audiologists perform hearing tests and monitor your child's hearing.
A specialist that tests and remediates hearing problems.
A health care professional who is trained to evaluate hearing loss and related disorders, including balance (vestibular) disorders and tinnitus (ringing in the ears) and to rehabilitate individuals with hearing loss and related disorders. See the entire definition of Audiologist
A professional who specializes in the evaluation of hearing ability and the treatment of impaired hearing.
A hearing healthcare professional who has earned a Masters Degree (M.S. or M.A.) or Doctorate Degree (Au.D. or Ph.D.) in audiology or a related field of study. Some activities that audiologists are involved with are the assessment and treatment of hearing and vestibular disorders, the dispensing of hearing aids, research, industrial consultation, and/or teaching.
a professional trained to assess a child's hearing and identify hearing impairments.
A specialist who evaluates and treats those whose communication (or hearing) disorders stem fully or partially from hearing impairment.
A hearing healthcare professional who holds a graduate degree and professional certification from an accrediting body in the assessment and management of hearing impairment.
A person who holds a degree in audiology and is a specialist in testing hearing and /or hearing loss. The American Speech-Language hearing Association is the only organization, which currently certifies audiologists although the American Academy of Audiology may also certify audiologists in the future. A certified audiologist will have the letters CCC-A or FAAA behind their name.
A person trained in the science of hearing and hearing impairments, who can administer tests and provide assistance in the rehabilitation of hearing-impaired persons.
A professional non-medical specialist who measures hearing levels and evaluates hearing loss.
A licensed health care professional who holds a degree in audiology and is a specialist in testing hearing and in other areas of hearing services including hearing aid evaluation, cochlear implant evaluation and recommendations for follow-up services. A pediatric audiologist is one who specializes in the assessment of infants. A habilitative audiologist is one who specializes in therapy for those with hearing loss. There are no separate licenses for these types of specialization.
A hearing health professional with a Masters degree in Audiology, a specialist in testing hearing and hearing loss.
Health care professionals specializing in the measurement of hearing and the correction of hearing impairment or hearing loss.
Professional trained in the science of audiology who may assess hearing, determine auditory capacity for processing sound, etc. An individual with a masters or doctorate degree who specializes in hearing assessment and habilitation and rehabilitation of p
Professional concerned with hearing assessment and non-medical management of hearing impairments.
A health care professional who tests hearing ability.
Specialist who is concerned with studying the nature of hearing, administering hearing tests to detect possible hearing loss, and giving information about hearing aids, training programs, and medical treatment.
An audiologist is a professional specializing in; testing, monitoring, and diagnosing disorders of the auditory and vestibular system portions of the ear; an audiologist diagnoses and treats hearing and balance problems. Audiologists are trained to diagnose, manage and treat hearing or balance problems for individuals from birth through adulthood. Audiologist have important work in helping to design and implement personal and industrial hearing safety programs, and providing special fitting ear plugs and other hearing protection equipment to help prevent hearing loss.