Winona Health Services
Hearing Loss Services
855 Mankato Ave, Winona, MN, 55987
Distance: 953 Miles
(507) 474-3065
rschultz@winonahealth.org
https://www.winonahealth.org/audiology-services
Service Details
Description
Audiology services for people who are hard of hearing or are impacted by hearing loss. Program can include evaluations, therapy, hearing aid fittings or other related services.
Additional Information
Audiology and hearing care
* Complete diagnostic hearing evaluations
* Hearing loss rehabilitation
* Hearing-related education and counseling
* Hearing aids and accessories
* Hearing aid fitting
* Hearing aid repair
* Tinnitus evaluation
* Custom hearing protection
* Live speech mapping
Features
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Area Served by County
- Fillmore County
- Houston County
- Winona County
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Specialization
- Deaf or hard-of-hearing
Area Served
Primarily Fillmore, Houston and Winona counties
Websites
Phone Numbers
Type | Number | Hours |
---|---|---|
Main | (507) 454-4366 | |
Main | (507) 454-3650 | |
Alternate1 | (507) 964-2941 | |
Toll Free | (800) 944-3960 |
Last Update
10/4/2024
Other Locations
This provider does not offer this service at other locations.
Other Services or resources
Taxonomy Terms Used: Clicking a taxonomy term from the list below launches a new search.
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LR-8000.0500-030Audiological Evaluations Definition
Programs that establish the nature and extent of an individual's hearing loss in order to devise an appropriate treatment plan. Evaluations may include pure tone and speech audiometry which measure hearing in terms of reception of calibrated test tones or spoken words which are presented at controlled levels of intensity; impedence tests which measure the integrity of the middle ear system and rule out conductive pathology; and auditory brain stem tests which utilize equipment similar to an EKG to measure neurological activity in response to auditory stimuli.
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YF-3200Hearing Loss Definition
A disruption in the normal hearing process that may occur in the outer, middle, or inner ear, which prevents sound waves from being converted to electrical signals and nerve impulses from being transmitted to the brain to be interpreted. Included are conductive hearing loss that results from abnormalities of the external ear and/or the ossicles of the middle ear; sensorineural hearing loss that results from malfunction of inner ear structures (i.e., cochlea); and central auditory dysfunction that results from damage or dysfunction at the level of the eighth cranial nerve, auditory brain stem, or cerebral cortex. Hearing loss may be present at birth (congenital) or become evident later in life (acquired); and may or may not preclude the normal development of language. The severity of hearing loss is measured in decibles (dB). The threshold or 0 dB mark for each frequency refers to the level at which typical young adults perceive a tone burst 50% of the time. Hearing is considered normal if an individual's thresholds are within 15 dB of normal thresholds. Severity of hearing loss is graded as mild (26-40 dB), moderate (41-55 dB), moderately severe (56-70 dB), severe (71-90 dB) and profound (90 dB).