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by Marshall Chasin, AuD
Audiology is a relatively new profession, seeing its growth after WWII. And like any new profession there are both downsides and upsides- the limits of what we do, and can do are not written in stone, but alas, recognition and statutory recognition and protection of our roles and responsibilities are underdeveloped. I recall when I…
by Ryan Kalef, BSc, MSc, AUD(C), RAUD
Isabelle Adam, MHSc, (Aud), Reg. CASLPO
Judy Davidson-Bertrand, BSc (C.D.), MSc, CCC-A, AUD(C), Reg. CASLPO
Stephanie Leutri, HIS
Julie Levionnois, MHSc (Aud), Reg. CASLPO
Melissa McFadden, MSc, Reg. CASLPO
Nichole Sorensen, BSc, MA, RAUD
Stacey Gent, BA(hons)
Kalef and colleagues share their recent research where they aim replicate and thus further validate the evidence from the 2016 study (A Canadian Evaluation of Real-Life Satisfaction of Hearing Aids in Challenging Environments) and to provide empirical evidence of the efficacy of direct connectivity to iPhones in hearing aids.
by Sweetwater
Cranking up the music volume is fun. It gets you pumped. But if you do it while you’re mixing in the studio, you’re shortchanging yourself. The good people at Sweetwater give us several reasons why you should turn it down when mixing.
by Gael Hannan
The always insightful Gael Hannan gives us some expert tips on what good communication looks like for people with hearing loss.
by Joshua Huppert, AuD
Pediatric audiologist at Children’s Hospital Colorado Joshua Huppert give us an excellent review of the vestibular system and and explores the prevalence of vestibular disorders in children.
by Margaret K. Miller, AuD
Lori J. Leibold, PhD
Miller and Leibold explore why conventional clinical tools do not fully capture children’s functional hearing abilities and what’s being done to help overcome this issue.
by Lorienne Jenstad, PhD
Valter Ciocca
Navid Shahnaz, PhD
Ilse Labuschagne
State-of-the-art teaching labs, research, and study areas create an ideal learning space for The School of Audiology and Speech Sciences (SASS) in the Faculty of Medicine at UBC, the only program in British Columbia that educates speech-language pathologists and audiologists.
with Marshall Chasin, AuD
Many of Marshall Chasin’s patients comment that around 3 PM they hit the wall and need a nap and he wonders why this is rarely ever mentioned or discussed relative to the audiology clinic.
by Marshall Chasin, AuD
I think that one of the most frustrating things that can happen in the clinic is to have a client with complaints of not being able to hear well in noise as their friends, only to find a normal audiogram. In the 1980s and 1990s, I would just look at them at tell them that…
with Kelly Tremblay
Kelly Tremblay gives us an interesting look at her time sitting at a table in Geneva last year to help craft the World Health Organization’s Guidelines on Integrated Care for Older People (ICOPE).