Hearing Health is Family Health
As you care for your aging parents, prioritize their hearing health for the well-being of your entire family. Trust Beltone Hearing Centers to provide the care and support they deserve.
Hearing Health Is a Gift to The Whole Family
As we cherish our family bonds, it’s crucial to recognize the profound impact of hearing health on our collective well-being.
- Strengthen Relationships: By addressing hearing challenges, we empower meaningful conversations, ensuring that every member’s voice is heard and valued.
- Rediscover Joyful Moments: Improved hearing revitalizes shared experiences, allowing everyone to actively participate.
- Enhance Quality of Life: Imagine the relief of your loved one no longer feeling isolated or misunderstood due to hearing difficulties.
- Promote Empathy and Understanding: By embracing your loved one’s journey to better hearing, we cultivate a culture of empathy and support within the family.
- Protect Future Generations: By prioritizing proactive care and open dialogue about hearing, you equip your family with the tools to prioritize their well-being for years to come.
Let’s embark on this journey together, where every conversation becomes a celebration of the love and unity that define your family
Patient Resources
Everything Families Need, All In One Place.
Here you’ll find everything you need for before, during and after your visit, as well as additional information on hearing healthcare.
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What’s the Link Between Alzheimer’s Disease and Hearing Loss?
Consider the findings of a 12-year study by researchers at Johns Hopkins¹:
- Mild hearing loss doubled an adult’s risk of dementia
- Moderate hearing loss tripled the risk
- Severe hearing impairment made adults five times more likely to develop dementia
Though the exact nature of this connection is still being explored by researchers, studies suggest hearing loss may change the brain in two notable ways: brain atrophy and brain overload.
Hearing Loss & Brain Atrophy
When the parts of the brain responsible for hearing are no longer stimulated by everyday sounds, they become less active. Similar to how muscles shrink when you stop exercising, these changes can be characterized as atrophy and contribute to cognitive decline.
Hearing Loss & Brain Overload
When it is difficult to hear, the brain must work overtime just to process auditory details. Constantly straining to hear can deplete the mental energy needed for crucial cognitive functions, such as problem solving and memory—and that can lead to further cognitive decline.
How Can Hearing Aids Help?
Experts have found that hearing aids can slow the rate of cognitive decline and improve the quality of life for people with dementia and hearing loss.² In addition, hearing aids can help to alleviate feelings of loneliness or depression that sometimes arise unexpectedly later in life.
Our hearing care professional can walk you through options that suit your particular hearing needs. Our hearing aids are available in a range of styles to suit a variety of lifestyles, ages and types of hearing loss.
At Beltone Hearing Care Center, we offer:
FREE Hearing Tests
FREE Lifetime Service
Personalized Support
Schedule With Us Today
We’re open Monday through Friday from 9:00am – 5:00pm, closed on Saturday and Sunday.