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Regulators issue plan for selling hearing aids OTC

Health officials say the proposal should lower prices that can exceed $5,000

- By Matthew Perrone

WASHINGTON — Health regulators on Tuesday unveiled their proposal to allow Americans to buy hearing aids without a prescripti­on, a long-awaited move intended to make the devices more accessible to millions of people with hearing problems.

The Food and Drug Administra­tion said the proposed rule would cut red tape that currently requires hearing exams and a prescripti­on for people with mild-to-moderate hearing loss. Under the plan, the devices could be ordered online or bought over-the-counter at pharmacies and other retail stores.

The move follows years of pressure from medical experts and consumer advocates to make the devices cheaper and easier to get.

More than 37 million Americans, or 15% of adults, have trouble hearing, according to the FDA, but only about one-fifth of people who can benefit from a hearing aid use one.

Cost is a big obstacle. Between the device itself and fitting services, Americans can pay more than $5,000 to get a hearing aid. Insurance coverage is very limited, and Medicare doesn’t pay for hearing aids, only diagnostic tests.

U.S. officials said Tuesday that the FDA change, when finalized, should spur competitio­n and bring down prices.

“Today we open the door to an easier process and a more affordable process,” Health and Human Services Secretary Xavier Becerra told reporters.

The agency will take public comments on its proposal for 90 days before finalizing the new rules. FDA officials wouldn’t speculate on when new devices would actually hit store shelves.

Consumer electronic companies for years have produced lower-cost “personal sound amplificat­ion” devices, but U.S. regulation­s bar them from being marketed as hearing aids and they do not undergo FDA review. Regulators said Tuesday that the new rules will make explicit that those devices are not alternativ­es to FDA-vetted hearing aids. Companies that market them inappropri­ately could face federal penalties, such as fines or product seizures.

For their part, makers of hearing aids have long argued that profession­al expertise is required to pick the right device and adjust its settings to work properly.

Once the FDA rules take effect, traditiona­l manufactur­ers are expected to begin selling cheaper, direct-to-consumer models. Eventually, advocates predict the hearing aid market will resemble eye care by offering a choice between drugstore reading glasses or prescripti­on bifocals.

The looser regulation­s would not apply to devices for people with severe hearing loss or for children. Also, the agency said over-the-counter devices would be required to have volume limits and other measures to help prevent injuries.

Tuesday’s announceme­nt follows prodding from medical committees and Congress, which in 2017 instructed the agency to lay out a plan for over-thecounter hearing devices by August 2020. The agency missed that deadline, in part due to the workload of the COVID-19 pandemic.

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