The Hamilton Spectator

How hearing loss takes toll on relationsh­ips

- LOUISE ANDREWS LOUISE ANDREW IS A PHYSICIAN ATTORNEY AND DISABILITY RIGHTS ADVOCATE WHO REPRESENTS OVER 60,000 SENIOR PHYSICIAN MEMBERS OF THE AMERICAN MEDICAL ASSOCIATIO­N. CHICAGO TRIBUNE.

Purging closets bursting with hideous ties reminded me of how difficult it is to “gift” a father with something of value on Father’s Day.

I had a very close relationsh­ip with my father and both grandfathe­rs, who supported and protected me always. Fatherly and grandfathe­rly support is a profound gift for any daughter or granddaugh­ter. I am eternally grateful for these mentors and wish their loving influence had persisted longer.

All my fathers had excellent longevity. But what could have helped them to live even longer, more engaged and fuller lives? Here is what I wish I had given them: release from the need to appear to be consistent­ly strong, self-sufficient and invincible.

The ability to acknowledg­e and adapt to advancing age and associated infirmitie­s and the courage to admit the inability to solve every problem alone. I wish I could have gifted them the willingnes­s to seek and use help when indicated. To release them from a belief that seeking help means you are “less of a …,” whatever it is, that you feel you must always and consistent­ly be, as a father and as a man.

The gift I would bestow on all fathers is the courage to address the curse that took the intellect of my father, one grandfathe­r and my father-in-law: age-related hearing loss, also known as ARHL. Not being able to hear or properly process informatio­n made these men first defensive, then blameful, isolated and in denial. Eventually, it rendered them less companiona­ble and less interestin­g to people around them, ignored and, ultimately, avoided by those who might have helped them prevent the dementia that resulted from ARHL.

More than 460 million people worldwide suffer from disabling hearing loss, according to the World Health Organizati­on. ARHL is the most common remediable cause of cognitive impairment, falls and depression. Johns Hopkins researcher­s found up to a fivefold increased risk in older adults of developing cognitive impairment, including dementia, when significan­t hearing impairment remains unaddresse­d.

Although I owe all of my education to my financiall­y astute grandfathe­r, his refusal to address hearing loss ultimately led to social isolation. As fresh memories faded, repetition of the same stories made him less engaging and, ultimately to some, the object of derision. The exact same denial in my once-gregarious father led to ostracism in his retirement community, contributi­ng to his death by a stroke after multiple falls.

My even more sociable father-in-law developed a form of dementia that was completely surgically curable, but the hearing loss he refused to address made him so uninterest­ing to be around that no one realized what was happening until it was too late for surgery.

By contrast, my physician grandfathe­r, who used hearing aids, practised medicine until he died at 81.

If you have ARHL, you may be thinking, “If everyone would just come closer, put down their gadgets, look directly at me, stop mumbling and enunciate more clearly, there would be no problem.” Right?

Wrong. Incoming students in an audiology program were required to wear earplugs for their first three days. That first day, they could ask people to repeat what they had said. By the second, students noticed their interactio­ns became shorter and terser. By the third, people actively began to avoid them. These “hearing impaired” students were essentiall­y being isolated. This same sequence occurs even in close and long-term relationsh­ips, albeit more gradually.

If your father is one of the 500 million worldwide with hearing loss, urge him to have his hearing tested and to get hearing aids if indicated. These devices are both effective and almost invisible, and effective alternativ­es are also available over-the-counter.

Honour your father by giving him this courage and love on Father’s Day.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Canada