The Partnership Approach, Advance for Hearing Practice
Transcription
The Partnership Approach, Advance for Hearing Practice
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Click and hold the mouse down to enlarge for easier reading. • End-of-article Extras: Look for the "black box" after articles that will refer you to related content on the Executive Insight web site . • Ads and Advertiser Index: Click on any advertisement or any company listed in our comprehensive advertiser index to visit their website. • Table of Contents: Click on any listing in the table of contents to be take directly to the article. Teeny. Tiny Siemens iMini™ Siem We’re doing tiny in a big Siemens booth #1127 is where the bes Come see for yourself. www.usa.siemens.com/hearing y. Mini. Now. mens miniTek™ Pure® Special Edition mini RIC Visit booth #1127 at AudiologyNOW! g way! st sound comes in small packages. Copyright © 2011 Siemens Hearing Instruments, Inc. All rights reserved. 2/11 SHI/11993-11 ITSTHATSOMETHINGXTRA YOUGETWORKINGWITHAN 4!UDIGY#ERTIlED PRACTICE ATANYSTAGEOFYOURCAREER students, audiologists & owners—do you have it? Learn the true power of Vision, Commitment and Execution. The Members/Owners of Audigy Group invite you to explore a partnership with them. Learn how they are, in many cases, exceeding their personal, professional and financial goals. Visit us at AudiologyNOW! 2011 booth 1035 International: see us at booth 1121 866.711.2026 • www.audigygroup.com student placement Deanna & Stacey Audigy Group met Stacey – a top audiology student – at AAA in 2009, and quickly recognized that she and Deanna – owner of a leading US audiology practice – shared similar personal, professional and financial goals. Now they both are realizing their goals together. It’s just another example of Audigy Group’s belief in Vision, Commitment and Execution. What are you looking for in an employer? | Respected professional in the field | Ability to support you as you grow in your career | Compatibility of professional goals and values | Experience mentoring employees | Has established training protocol | Will facilitate your continued learning Come grow with us Build your career, knowing you’re a member of a group that has seen tremendous growth and success. We'd love for you to join us as we continue to improve the lives of employees around the country. X 2009: 223rd fastest growing private company in the U.S. (Inc. 500) Deanna Frazier, Au.D., FAAA, Doctor of Audiology Audigy Group member since 2008 Bluegrass Hearing Clinic, Richmond, KY Stacey High, Au.D., CCC-A, Doctor of Audiology professional placement Nancy & Amit Nancy and Amit – each with their own unique set of personal, professional and financial goals – were introduced to each other by Audigy Group in 2008. The Audigy Group business model became the vehicle for each of them to not only achieve their own goals, but also share a common set of goals to significantly grow the practice. That’s Audigy Group’s Vision, Commitment and Execution in action. Nancy M. Bowen, M.S., CCC-A, Clinical Audiologist Audigy Group member since 2007, Audiology Clinic, Vancouver, WA Amit Gosalia, Au.D., FAAA, Doctor of Audiology Seeking to eventually own his own private practice X 2010: 863rd fastest growing private company in the U.S. (Inc. 500) X 2010: Ranked #19 in the Fastest Growing Companies (Portland Business Journal) get yourapp w o h s e e fr oup Audigy Gr nts of Complime yNOW! 2011 show app log er Free Audio ile devices & comput b for your mo S FEATU`RCoEmpany Directory Show Map agement Tool ` Interactive Schedule Man ` r da n le Ca ts stant Twitter ` Special Even e social dashboard—get in show th ™, t the ` ShowStream dates from your peers abou up and Facebook aaa11/ / m ketart.co .mar Find it at m march/april Volume 13 l Number 2 l 2011 This issue On the Web site www.advanceweb.com/hearing Check Out the Top Ten 22 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 Explaining Hearing Loss Cover 22 Practice Profile: Kathy Mellott, AuD Regrowing Hair Cells in the Human Cochlea By Rich Magda Features Starkey Introduces AMP, an ‘Invisible’ Hearing Aid ASK THE EXPERTS 20 Behind-the-Ear Hearing Aids: What new technology/functionality is becoming available in BTE hearing aids? Selective Sound Sensitivity Syndrome The Ear and the Eye CORPORATE PROFILE 27 Widex Thriving in the ‘New Normal’ Economy HEARING TECHNOLOGY 28 Rethinking Accessory Devices By Donald J. Schum, PhD The Case for 2.4 GHz Digital Wireless Technology AUDOKU Hearing Aid Acronyms Hearing Loss Screening Recommendations to be Updated Patient Education Handouts 40 BUSINESS 40 Achieving Success in 20 Questions By Brian Taylor, AuD RESOURCE DIRECTORY 44 The ADVANCE Guide to Hearing Aid Accessories Columns 6 Pediatric Pointers 8 Patient Education 10 Keys to Success 12 Private Practitioner 14 Tinnitus Topics INDUSTRY INSIDER 34 Marketing and Business Strategies: What are some innovative strategies to market and operate a hearing practice? 16 The Bottom Line SPECIAL SUPPLEMENT 35 Building Revenue: Practical Strategies for Profitablity Departments 18 Retail Strategies 46 Point of View 9 Ad Index 45 Career Opportunities How to Reach Us • On the Web: www.advanceweb.com • E-mail: advance@merion.com • Information/Editorial: (610) 278-1400 • Article Reprints: 800-355-5627, ext. 1446 • Editorial Fax: (610) 275-8562 • Display Ad Fax: (610) 278-1421 • Calendar Fax: (610) 278-1422 • Recruitment Ad Fax: (610) 278-1420 • Subscriptions: 800-355-1088. Copyright 2011 by Merion Matters. All rights reserved. Reproduction of any form is forbidden without written permission of publisher. ADVANCE for Hearing Practice Management is published 6 times per year by Merion Publications Inc., 2900 Horizon Drive, P.O. Box 61556, King of Prussia, PA 19406-0956. Postmaster: send address changes to Circulation, ADVANCE for Audiologists, Merion Matters, 2900 Horizon Drive, P.O. Box 61556, King of Prussia, PA 19406-0956. Advance is a member of the National Association for Health Care Recruitment. Subscriptions are free to qualified audiologists, hearing aid specialists, otolaryngologists, hearing aid manufacturers and others allied to the field. ADVANCE also serves the healthcare field with publications for Nursing, Rehabilitation, Imaging, Speech and Audiology, Respiratory Care, Laboratory Medicine, Information Systems, Health Information, Long-Term Care Management, Nurse Practitioners, Physician Assistants, and Age Management. Advertising Policy All advertisements sent to Merion Matters for publication must comply with all applicable laws and regulations. Recruitment ads that discriminate against applicants based on sex, age, race, religion, marital status or any other protected class will not be accepted for publication. The appearance of advertisements in ADVANCE Newsmagazines is not an endorsement of the advertiser or its products or services. Merion Matters does not investigate the claims made by advertisers and is not responsible for their claims. 4 ADVance for Hearing Practice management l March/April 2011 w w w.advance web.com/hearing The difference between hearing and hearing N OW 0 0 2 $ OFF! When was the last time your customers heard music and speech the way it’s meant to sound? Domino is a hearing system that works together with the user’s hearing aids to deliver every word in its natural essence – even in the toughest listening situation. It’s the perfect choice in circumstances where hearing aids just aren’t enough. Listening to a distant speaker at a seminar, enjoying the company of friends at a busy restaurant or watching a TV show – Domino delivers speech with incredible detail. Directly in the ears and down to the last syllable. Packed with the latest digital technology, it’s still surprisingly easy to use. Domino – brings out the details. bellman.se/us/audio Available with a powerful neckloop. Now $200 off! Harris Communications 1-800-825-6758 Voice/TTY | www.harriscomm.com Sound Clarity 1-888-477-2995 Voice/TTY | www.soundclarity.com Special offer extended until June 30, 2011 or while supplies last. Quality of Sweden By Johnnie Sexton, AuD Pediatric Pointers as language habilitation, auditory training, speech reading, (lipreading), hearing evaluation, and speech conservation; • Creation and administration of programs for prevention of hearing loss; Over the years during my work with schools, children and families, • Counseling and guidance of pupils, windows of opportunity have allowed wonderful expansions of programs for parents, and teachers regarding hearing audiology and HI services. In fact, at the end of each school year, my staff and I loss; prepare a “wish list” for the school administrators in case there are any funds • Determination of the child’s need for available that must be used or lost. group and individual amplification, selecting and fitting an appropriate aid, and No matter what setting districts for which my practice provides evaluating the effectiveness of amplificayou are in as an audiolo- educational audiology services, the school tion; gist, you may have before you a window of administrator and I collaborated and were • Identification of children with audiopportunity to enhance services and tech- able to purchase $103,000 in new personal tory impairments, using at-risk criteria and nology for schools in your local areas. If you FM devices for students. It is not unheard appropriate audiological screening techare employed as an educational audiologist, of for school administrators to “hold back” niques; in private practice or in a medical/clini- on spending these funds until the last min• Determination of the range, nature, and cal setting that provides pediatric services, ute. The administrators often are afraid that degree of hearing loss and communication exploring the current status of “stimulus they will need the funds for some major functions, by use of audiologic evaluation funds” could yield positive outcomes for all issue or emergency, so the money sits until procedures; involved. For those of you in other audiol- the last six months or so. Then that “win• Referral for medical and other services ogy settings, you could have an opportunity dow of opportunity” opens. necessary for the habilitation or rehabilitato establish relationships with local school As an audiologist, being prepared for this tion of an infant or toddler with a disability opportunity means getting to know the who has an auditory impairment; districts for expansion of services. To explain the term “stimulus funds:” On February 17, 2009, the American Recovery An online library of all Pediatric Pointer columns is available in the columns and Reinvestment Act of 2009 (ARRA) was section at www.advanceweb.com/hearing. signed into law. This legislation brought an unprecedented $787 billion of appropria- local school district administrators and • Provision of auditory training, aural tions, with more than $100 billion in funds educating them on the mandate for audi- rehabilitation, speech reading and listening dedicated to education. These funds were ology services in the schools as well as the device orientation and training, and other to be distributed over a two-year period, technology available to assist students in services; beginning in July 2009. classrooms. Most importantly, audiologists • Provision of services for the prevention So what does this have to do with audi- need to make sure that they are educated of hearing loss; and ology? There are some targeted areas for and up to speed on available technologies. • Determination of a child’s need for spending ARRA funds for projects within These services, as outlined in IDEA parts individual amplification, including selectthe scope of the Individuals with Disabili- B and C, are to be provided by a licensed ing, fitting and dispensing of appropriate ties Education Act (IDEA), including: audiologist who is qualified and trained listening and vibrotactile devices, and evalin pediatric audiology and the fitting and uating the effectiveness of those devices. • audiology services; • technology for identification of hearing management of assistive technology. Any So take the time to research the needs disabilities (otoacoustic emissions, tym- other staff involved with this technology of local school districts, whether you are panograms); must be directly trained and supervised by employed by a school district or not. By • technology for classroom use (FM, a licensed audiologist. being proactive, your efforts may bring sound field). According to IDEA Part B-300.34 (c) (1) about a whole new era in service and techIn the next few months, all of these and Part C-300.13 (b) (2), audiology ser- nology availability for children in your area. funds have to be spent. In one of the school vices include: Step through this outstanding window of • Identification of children with hearing opportunity! loss; • Determination of the range, nature and degree of hearing loss, including referral for Johnnie Sexton, AuD, is executive director of The medical or other professional attention for CARE Project Inc., Wilmington, NC. For more information: johnnie.sexton@thecareproject.me, www. the habilitation of hearing; Information sponsored by Oticon Pediatrics Inc. • Provision of habilitation activities, such thecareproject.me. www.oticonusa.com A Window of Opportunity 6 ADVance for Hearing Practice management l March/April 2011 w w w.advance web.com/hearing Oticon Safari – built for a life of adventure The Oticon Safari family is the first truly dedicated family of hearing instruments designed specifically for children of all ages and degrees of hearing loss. Safari comprises three BTE models - 312, 13 and 13 Super Power - each available at three price points to make it easier to meet the needs of parents, too. With Streamer and ConnectLine, Safari also gives children from youngsters to teens new opportunities to connect to TVs, PCs, mobile phones and mp3 players with far more ease than before. Safari demonstrates true Child Friendly Hearing Care: t&YUFOEFECBOEXJEUI t7JTVBM-&%JOEJDBUPS t&BTZDPOOFDUJPOUP'.BOEQFSTPOBMFMFDUSPOJDT t%FEJDBUFE1FEJBUSJDmUUJOHNPEF t$PVOTFMJOHBOETVQQPSUNBUFSJBMTGPSQSPGFTTJPOBMT parents, children, teens and teachers Learn more about the Safari family at www.oticonusa.com, or contact Oticon Pediatrics at 888-684-7331 or pediatrics@oticonusa.com ADVANCE for Hearing Practice Managment_Safarifamily.indd 1 3/16/2011 12:51:44 PM By Jonathan R. Brown, PhD, CCC-A, CED Patient Education Communication in Noisy Conditions Noise during communication exchanges between two people may be described as any auditory or visual interference that impacts the quality and quantity of the transmission and/or the reception of information. Examples of noise that can interfere with communication are machines operating, music playing, ongoing traffic noise, multiple people talking, people moving, and distracting lights. The impact of noise may be most apparent during day-to-day communication activities, such as face-to-face and telephone conversations. Treating Hearing in Noise Problems For listeners with hearing in noise problems, the following are a few options that an audiologist may recommend to a patient. For listeners who wear hearing aids: • Use two hearing aids rather than one hearing aid. Normally hearing listeners use The degree to which people have problems both ears to enhance listening to speech in listening to speech in noise may be mea- noisy conditions. • Use a hearing aid microphone that is sured. Audiologists, after at least a basic evaluation has been completed, have the highly directional. Directional microphones knowledge and experience to test a person’s help to improve signal reception. Testing for Hearing in Noise Problems If you are having trouble hearing speech in noisy conditions, an audiologist can help you identify your problems and find solutions to improve your quality of life. hard of hearing provide communication strategies, such as listening, watching and positioning, that help listeners more fully use conditional cues to enhance the reception of communication. Living with Hearing in Noise Problems The first goal for a person having problems hearing speech in noise is to seek help from an audiologist. The second goal is to work with the audiologist to identify the problems that a listener may have hearing and discriminating speech in noisy conditions. Lastly, the patient and audiologist work together to find strategic and possibly electronic solutions to improve the quality of life the listener deserves to enjoy. ability to hear and discriminate speech in • Use hearing aids with enhanced digital noise. The testing used by audiologists signal processing. Digital processing helps simulates excellent to poor listening con- to reduce the impact of some unwanted ditions that a person may experience and sounds. compares the patient’s responses in these conditions to the responses from a random For anyone: sample of normally hearing listeners. The • Use an auditory training device dur- References test results provide a measure of the types of ing controlled listening conditions. These 1. Communication Sciences and Disorders, The Pennproblems and the degree of problems a lis- devices are typically used in meetings, con- sylvania State University. Accessed online at http://csd. tener is likely experiencing during everyday ferences and classrooms. The speaker wears hhdev.psu.edu/clinic/audiology.html. listening conditions. Accurately identifying a transmitting device and the listener wears listening problems is the first step in finding a receiving device. the help that is needed to improve a person’s • Use skills learned during auditory train- Jonathan R. Brown is a professor at Clarion quality of life. ing. Audiologists and teachers of the deaf/ University, Clarion, PA. This patient handout is designed as a general guide to help patients better understand a condition or issue. For more specific information, patients should consult a hearing healthcare professional. Look for more patient handouts about other hearing topics at www.advanceweb.com/hearing jeff leeser Even for normally hearing listeners, surrounding noise may cause communication problems; however, for people who have a hearing loss, listening to speech in noise is likely the most problematic communication condition they routinely experience. Advertiser Index ACT NOW! Support the companies that support your profession. The companies listed below support the hearing profession by placing advertisements in Advance for Hearing Practice Management. Their support keeps our publication coming to you free of charge. Please contact these advertisers or visit their Web sites to learn more about their products or services. Advertiser Phone or web address Pg. # ADVANCE Custom Promotions www.advancecustompromotions.com 47 ADVANCE Healthcare Shop www.advancehealthcareshop.com 29 American Hearing Aid Associates www.ahaanavigator.com 31 Audigy Group LLC www.audigygroup.com 2, 3 Auditdata www.real-ear.com 33 Symfon® www.bellman.se/us/audio 5 Discovery Hearing Aid Warranties www.discoverywarranties.com 33 Hansaton www.hansaton-usa.com 17 Harris Communications www.harriscomm.com 42 Oticon Inc. www.oticonusa.com 7, 19 ReSound www.gnresound.com/remotemic 21 Rexton Inc. www.rexton-online.com 13 Siemens Hearing Instruments Inc. www.usa.siemens.com/aquaris cover gatefold, 23 Sonic Innovations www.sonici.com 24, 25 Sonus www.sonus.com 11 TIMS® Software www.timssoftware.com/audiology 26 Van B. Enterprises www.hearingaidsweatband.com 42 VARTA Microbattery Inc. www.powerone-batteries.com insert Westone® www.westone.com 48 Weitbrecht Communications Inc. www.weitbrecht.com 41 WhisperRoom Inc. www.whisperroom.com 34 Widex® www.widexPro.com 15 Williams Sound Corp. www.williamssound.com 20 Bellman & DON’T LET THIS BE YOUR LAST ISSUE. To make sure you keep receiving this magazine, you need to renew your FREE subscription. HERE’S HOW: Just call 800-355-1088, (M-F, 8am-6pm ET) OR, RENEW ONLINE AT www.advanceweb.com/hearing Log on to www.advanceweb.com/hearing directory. Our searchable online Buyers Guide allows you to receive detailed information about companies and products, as well as submit Your FREE subscription, online and in print, gains you access to many advantages of ADVANCE: requests for free info. free Product Info Q Articles on timely clinical topics More ways to get product information from these advertisers: Contact the Advertiser Directly: Visit the Web site advertiser by using the listed URL. Q The latest professional news Mail/Fax: Check the corresponding advertiser name and mail to Advance for Hearing Q Job opportunities Practice Management—Hotline, 2900 Horizon Drive, Box 61556, King of Prussia, PA 19406-0956. Or, fax to 610-278-1426 for faster service. 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I don't wish to receive a bi-weekly ADVANCE E-Newsletter covering all the latest issues in my field as well as renewal updates and special editorial announcements. ADVance for Hearing Practice management 9 By Kathy Foltner, AuD keys to success documents can be long and appear daunting, they are designed to protect franchisees in that once the franchise agreement, which is attached to the disclosure documents, is signed it cannot be changed by the franchisor without the franchisee’s permission. The importance of this restriction is readily apparent to anyone who has done business Across industries and as a general business rule, franchises with an entity under certain terms or condiallow businesses to remain independent while providing support systems tions only to find out those terms have been that are otherwise not available to business owners. Starting a private unilaterally changed. As an example, in a practice and owning a business are inherently risky, but owning a franchise franchise an exclusive territory is defined in can provide access to business resources that can help to reduce that risk.1 the franchise agreement and, assuming the franchisee complies with the terms of the Audiologists who own a investment (ROI), owner compensation and franchise agreement, the territory belongs private practice are well profit. A franchise is designed to provide a to the franchisee and cannot be unilaterally aware of the many areas of business in which formal support structure that assists the new changed by the franchisor. That is not the they must either be an expert or seek expert or experienced owner in making his or her case with buying groups or networks that advice: marketing, generating referrals, business maximally successful. are not regulated by the FTC. operations, staff training and management, Franchises offer multiple benefits, includAll audiologists should understand the information technology including software, ing a built-in support system, a history in basics of business and audiology practice and finance are just a few areas that all busi- the field, comprehensive training programs, management whether they own a practice or ness owners must manage. The better these sample employee policies and procedures, are employed. Many audiologists have utilized areas of business are managed, the greater established supply lines with improved the “learn as you go” method for practice manthe chances of success for any business, purchasing power, a recognized brand with agement, but a franchise can offer training including audiology private practice. Most audiologists have minimal formal For more information on the benefits of franchises, view a summary chart that training in business management, and this compares franchise and non-affiliated audiology business practice issues in the lack of experience or confidence in business “Online Extras” section at www.advanceweb.com/hearing. management often creates fear or uncertainty that stops them from entering private increased name recognition, marketing and support that reduce the chances of makpractice. Some audiologists took a leap of programs, an established market presence ing costly mistakes and therefore increase the faith and entered private practice absent that with proven business strategy, lower unfore- participants’ chances for success. extensive business training, but the number seen costs, easier streamlined start-ups, a of audiologist practice owners is relatively higher success rate and reduced risk.3,4 The References small. According to a survey conducted by financial, management, training, human 1. International Franchise Organization; Frequently the American Academy of Audiology, the resource, operations and marketing sup- Asked Questions About Franchising. Accessed Februmajority of audiologists (55 percent) reported port offered by a franchise can be extremely ary 2011 online at www.franchise.org/franchiseesecondary. their primary job title as “staff audiologist” valuable to audiologists and can create the aspx?id=1008. whereas only 14 percent of audiologists time and freedom for the audiologist owner 2. Sullivan, E. American Academy of Audiology Compenreported their primary job title as “owner.”2 to see more patients while at the same time sation and Benefits Survey 2007, Revised 2008. Precision Additionally, formal analysis of many private expertly managing his or her business for Reports, LLC, Bainbridge Island, WA. 3. GlobalBX. Accessed December 2010 at www.globalbx.com. practices often uncovers room for improve- maximum profit and success. ment with important business variables such The sale of franchises is regulated by federal 4. Gaebler Resources for Entrepreneurs. Accessed Decemas key performance indicators, cost of goods, and state laws. The laws are designed to pro- ber 2010 at www.gaebler.com. processes, patient satisfaction measures, tect the prospective franchisee and to provide practice efficiencies, marketing return on the prospective franchisee with information that he or she may need to make an informed Kathy Foltner, AuD, is vice president of Sonus decision about purchasing a franchise. The Franchise Sales–East. She has 35 years of indusFederal Trade Commission (FTC) requires a try experience and holds adjunct faculty status at franchise provide each prospective franchisee Rush University Medical Center and Salus Univerwith a disclosure document that specifies the sity. Contact her at kathy.foltner@amplifon.com Information sponsored by Sonus-USA Inc. obligations and responsibilities of the fran- or 312-286-7888. Visit www.sonus.com for more Minnesota Registration #F-1032,5000 Cheshire Parkway North, Plymouth, MN 55446 chisor and the franchisee. Although these information. Franchise: A New Model for Audiology Practice Success 10 ADVance for Hearing Practice management l March/April 2011 w w w.advance web.com/hearing A New Model for Success in Hearing Care Introducing the Sonus Franchise Nearly 100 hearing care locations have already joined. Many more independent hearing care practices have inquired about this unprecedented new opportunity. In a changing hearing industry, the Sonus franchise will support you in growing your business: • A multi-talented marketing team to support your local efforts with marketing programs that generates over 3:1 Return On Investment (ROI) • A completely automated Customer Relationship Management (CRM) program to save your time and helping ensure repeat sales and referrals with a 40:1 ROI • First of its kind, National Call Center to answer all the calls generated by marketing campaigns and book appointments directly into your location through the Sonus Private Cloud • Advanced IT systems integrated with QuickBooks that calculates ROI for marketing activities, includes insurance billing and management and much more LOOKING TO ENTER, EXPAND OR SELL YOUR PRACTICE? OR DO YOU SIMPLY WANT TO SPEND LESS TIME RUNNING THE BUSINESS AND MORE TIME WITH PATIENTS? Get all the facts. Call 877-879-0475 to schedule your private and confidential meeting with Kathy Foltner, Au.D., or Thomas Tedeschi, Au.D. Whatever your goals, a Sonus franchise may be right for you! Kathy Foltner, Au.D. www.sonus.com 877-879-0475 By Angela Morris, AuD private practitioner Charitable Partnerships Create Practice Promotion During a brainstorming session at a weekly have been several tangible successes associteam meeting, my staff and I came up with ated with our program. a unique “outside the box” idea that has • The organizations that we partner with been a service to our community as well as are able to do less work to raise more money a service to our practice. We wanted to find (how many candy bars do you have to sell to a way to donate to local community causes raise the same amount of money—and who such as churches, high school bands, soft- has time?). publicity,” and you don’t want your pracball teams, and charities, but we needed to • The organization does all of the leg- tice to be associated with a disreputable do it in a way that would not cost us a lot work in promoting the opportunity to their charity. of money. supporters and the general public—I don’t • Even if there is limited participation We developed a plan to donate a portion have to do anything to promote the dona- in a particular promotion, the effort is still of each hearing aid sale to local charities, while putting the charity to work as our Get more strategies for private practice success, growth and profitability sales force. It is the same dynamic transfer in the online archive of this column at www.advanceweb.com/Hearing PrivatePractitioner. concept that many groups have used successfully to promote every type of product and service, from restaurant dining to wrap- tions, but my practice gets the credit. For worthwhile. Everyone who sees the proping paper. The basic steps are simple: example, one group had the newspaper motion will remember the name of your • We developed a customizable flyer that publish an article about the program and practice when they are ready to see an audiwe use to describe the details of each chari- the fact that my practice was donating a ologist. table promotion. Information includes how portion of hearing aid revenue to the charThis community outreach effort has been much per hearing aid will be donated to the ity. That news story was free advertising for highly successful for my practice. It is easy cause, a description of the charity and how us! Other groups put the flyers in the paper, to manage and truly has made a difference place them in various businesses around to the organizations that I have supported. supporters can participate. • We turn the f lyer over to the non- town, hand them out to congregations and I am confident that it could be a successful profit organization for distribution. They local organizations—and they all feature strategy for any practice. can make as many copies as they like and the name of my practice front and center. distribute them in any manner that they • Patients who come in through this offer This article was made possible by a partnerchoose. typically establish long-term relationships ship between ADVANCE and the Academy • Participants bring in the f lyer and with me and my staff, and we receive a tre- of Doctors of Audiology. For more informareceive the “per-aid” discount, which we mendous return on investment long after tion on ADA activities, educational offerings donate to the organization. In actuality, the fundraising promotion ends. and/or membership, visit the ADA website the discount that we ordinarily would have at www.audiologist.org or call ADA at 866given to the patient is simply transferred Fundraising Partnership Tips 493-5544. to the charitable organization; the process • Larger organizations, or those with costs us nothing out of pocket. several staff members or volunteers, are generally able to spread the word more eas- Angela Morris, AuD, owns and operates Southeast Kentucky Audiology in Corbin, KY. She serves Key Successes ily to achieve better results. In addition to the long-term goodwill that • It is important to work with reputable a member at large on the Academy of Doctors of charity relationships have generated, there organizations. There is such a thing as “bad Audiology Board of Directors. 12 ADVance for Hearing Practice management l March/April 2011 w w w.advance web.com/hearing kyle kielinski Partnering with a non-profit organization can be an excellent way for an audiology practice to garner positive publicity while supporting a great cause—and, as I have discovered, you don’t have to spend an arm and a leg to do it successfully! My practice, located in Corbin, KY, has developed meaningful non-profit partnerships to raise awareness about my services while supporting worthy causes along the way. Here’s how we did it and how you can too. Visit us at booth # 2245! [ Absolutely, positively better hearing. ] High-Tech Intelligence. Relevant & Advanced Features. Live In-Booth Presentations. Join us at booth #2245 to take your business to the next level. With short presentations on our newest features, given every hour on the hour, there’s sure to be a session that fits in your schedule. 800.876.1141, www.rexton-online.com By Merideth Eldridge, MA Tinnitus Topics Some patients you never forget. Early in my audiology career, I was confronted with an elderly woman who reported hearing non-stop marching bands and show tunes. She insisted that the music was so loud that I would be able to hear it coming out of her ears if I came a little closer! As she tapped her finger and her head bounced in rhythm with the tunes, my mind was swirling with questions: Is this tinnitus? How will I explain this? Should I refer her? Musical tinnitus can be exacerbated by professionals who are not knowledgeable about the condition. Let patients know they are not alone and reassure them that their symptoms are not an indicator of mental illness. Many years later and more experienced with tinnitus patients, I have consistently heard a similar complaint from patients and colleagues. The auditory perception of hearing music or singing is reported in the literature and called musical tinnitus, auditory imagery, musical ear syndrome or auditory hallucinations. Many of these cases go unreported because patients are afraid that family, friends and professionals will think they have mental illness. In fact, most patients have that underlying fear themselves, a fear that may unnecessarily exacerbate their condition. Although the definition for tinnitus and auditory hallucinations are the same—phantom sensory phenomena in the absence of real 14 ADVance for Hearing Practice management l March/April 2011 Merideth Eldridge, MA, is a tinnitus consultant at Eldridge Consulting, LLC, and a member of the Tinnitus Practitioners Association Board of Directors. For more information or to find an audiologist in your area that specializes in tinnitus treatment: www.tinnituspractitioners.com. w w w.advance web.com/hearing kyle kielinski When the Music Never Stops external sensory stimuli—using the term “hallucination” can be detrimental because it elicits such negative emotions and reactions. Most patients instinctively know that what they are experiencing, whatever it is called, is “weird,” and they worry that they are “losing their mind.” We can help them understand that there is a difference between psychiatric auditory hallucinations that generally occur with mental illness and non-psychiatric auditory hallucinations that generally occur with hearing loss. People who experience psychiatric auditory hallucinations generally hear voices which speak clearly and directly to them. People who experience nonpsychiatric auditory hallucinations mostly hear music, singing or unclear babbling. Sometimes the condition is exacerbated by a professional who is not knowledgeable about the condition or the neurophysiology of tinnitus. Consider the woman who reported she heard a tenor singing. It began while she was in the hospital. She thought she was hearing Muzak but, when she went home, she could still hear the singing at night. Although the music was soft and pleasant and actually helped her sleep, she became very concerned when her physician suggested that she see a psychiatrist. Following counseling from an experienced tinnitus specialist, she was relieved and is doing fine. Some patients report having non-bothersome typical tinnitus, and then suddenly they experience a musical component that is alarming and can be debilitating. This was the case with an elderly man who experienced profound hearing loss in one ear, moderate loss in the other ear and mild, non-bothersome tinnitus. Suddenly, following a medication change, he noticed a very loud unending sequence of six distinct songs. He became extremely distressed and contacted his audiologist who referred him to a tinnitus specialist. It is not clear what causes the more complex auditory perception to occur, but lack of auditory stimuli due to damaged hair cells is usually considered the main culprit. Stressful events, anxiety or medications may be contributors. Generally, the condition is more common in elderly hard-of-hearing patients. Therefore, consider including music in your description of tinnitus (i.e., ringing, hissing, crickets, music, etc.) in your initial evaluation of hearing loss. Often, the patient will feel “safe” about reporting the symptom if you initiate the topic. Let the patient know that this symptom has been reported by others and they are not alone. Reassure them that it is not an indicator of mental illness and encourage a rich auditory environment. If the patient is bothered by the symptom, consider referring to an audiologist that specializes in tinnitus treatment. Most patients are successfully treated with a combination of counseling and sound therapy. EVERYTHING WILL BECOME CLEAR ON APRIL 7, 2011 VISIT THE WIDEX BOOTH #1347 AT AudiologyNOW FOR A LIVE DEMONSTRATION! Call your Widex USA sales representative to reserve a time to see this exciting presentation. Seating is limited. CALL TODAY! www.widexPro.com | 1.800.221.0188 By Granville Y. Brady Jr., AuD Bottom Line When It’s Time to Find the Right Partner Almost every successful audiology practice experiences a time when additional staff is required. Adding personnel can be a response to increased market share, a desire to expand the scope of practice, the owner’s burnout or a simple desire to share the professional load with a colleague that can be trusted to continue the quality of services developed over the years. Am I emotionally and financially suited to accept a partner into my practice? Not everyone can work well with others. An audiologist who has been used to “calling the shots” for many years might be reluctant to share decision making with someone else. In cases where the practice owner cannot give up control, the partnership rarely succeeds. When taking on a partner, unless the new audiologist has an established patient base, there will be a financial burden on the practice. It takes time to break someone in and time for patients to accept a new 16 ADVance for Hearing Practice management associate, meaning it can take anywhere from one to three years or more for the new partner to “pay for himself.” In the interim, funds must be available for the payroll and associated personnel expenses even when the partner is not fully productive. Do I have the space and potential clientele to succeed with another audiologist in the office? If the practice has multiple offices, this might not be a problem, but the own- patients from the former office. A partner who is bilingual can open up new markets with different ethnic groups. Expansion also may occur if the new partner has expertise in specialty areas such as vestibular testing, pediatrics or cochlear implant mapping. Am I willing to be flexible in helping the partnership to succeed? Recognize that buying into an existing practice may of- Want to read more great advice from Dr. Brady? There are 16 of his excellent Bottom Line columns available in our online library at www.advanceweb.com/ HearingBottomLine. er should not expect a new partner simply to take up the slack of leftover cases. If the practice does not have a sufficient caseload to support a second clinician, time and money will have to be spent developing additional clientele. What skills am I looking for in a partner? Practice owners that want clones of themselves will be disappointed. Not only will a new partner bring a different skill set into the practice, any attempt by the owner to restrict or control a new partner likely will lead to disaster. We all like to feel that we are indispensable, especially if we’ve had a successful one-person show for many years, but the truth is that nobody is irreplaceable. The wise practice owner will seek someone who can complement, not reproduce, the services that already have been established. How can the partner improve business? In some instances, a new partner may bring l March/April 2011 fer many challenges for a potential new partner. Often a talented young audiologist does not have the capital to buy into a business right away. A structured settlement where the new partner pays out over time can be negotiated. If the prospective partner is very talented with skills that are in great demand, the practice owner might offer a “sweat equity” arrangement wherein a portion of the new partner’s revenue is credited toward the purchase price of the shares. When an existing owner seeks a partner, creative financing can be the difference between a successful relationship and one that is doomed to failure. However, the cardinal rule in establishing a successful partnership is that both parties are satisfied with the arrangement. Granville Y. Brady Jr., AuD, owns a private audiology practice in Clifton and East Brunswick, NJ. Contact him at drgranbrady@optonline.net. w w w.advance web.com/hearing jeff Leeser An a lternative to hiring staff is to take on a partner. A potential partner might be an associate employee already with the practice or a colleague that has similar interests but is employed elsewhere. Occasionally, a gifted student with a clinical doctorate might come along at just the right time. Whatever the candidate’s background, the owner needs to look at how he or she might be incorporated as a partner into an already thriving practice. Before seeking a partner, the owner should take stock of what the practice now offers and what services, if any, the additional colleague might provide. For example, a dispensing practice that has many requests for testing children might seek an audiologist with pediatric experience. Likewise, vestibular testing is somewhat specialized and can be a source of revenue for the right practice. Furthermore, vertiginous patients might be good candidates for amplification since many geriatric cases have both BPPV and hearing loss. Before the practice owner begins the search for a partner, he or she should consider several very important issues: Tiny product. Gigantic breakthrough. X-Mini Rechargeable RIC 5-year battery life with 20 hours per charge. Why choose design or technology when you can have both? The new AQ X-Mini Rechargeable RIC is the perfect balance of style and substance—combining an elegant RIC design with the industry’s best recharging system. It’s the most sophisticated and trouble-free hearing instrument on the planet. See it for the first time April 7-9 at AudiologyNOW! 2011, booth 1673. Become a Hansaton provider today. It’s the most sound decision you’ll make this year. To learn more about Hansaton products, email info@hansaton.com, call 888.984.7432 or visit hansaton-usa.com By Tom Nelson, MBA Retail Strategies The Patient-Friendly Office You have developed a marketing plan and prospective patients are calling your office. What do they experience when they call your office or walk through your door for the first time? When was the last time you looked at your office from a patient’s perspective? Have you experienced calling your office, setting up an appointment and waiting in your waiting room as if you were new to your office, feeling the emotions of someone getting their hearing evaluated for the first time? What do the look of your office and the actions of your staff say about you and the care you will be giving someone? With all you have to think about in a day sometimes these things can get overlooked. The Front Line of the Office feel important and that they will not be introduce practice staff by providing short Your receptionist and front-office staff are forgotten. Address patients using formal bios, credentials and images. A waiting area the front line in your practice’s interaction titles, such as Mr. Brown or Mrs. Smith. also offers a great opportunity to use a flatwith patients. Unfortunately, patients may Many older patients feel that they deserve screen TV to run educational videos; you judge you and your practice by that front this level of respect until they become more could include looped clips from manufacline, even as early as when they first call to familiar with you and ask you to call them turers highlighting new products or offer make an appointment. It’s very important by their first name. educational presentations on hearing, the for your staff to be friendly, courteous and causes of hearing loss and how today’s techclear as they interact with patients both in The Waiting Room: nology can help people return to the family, Not Just a Place to Wait person and on the phone. friends and lifestyle activities they may have When patients call, one simple way to All too often we think that it will take a been missing. make them feel more comfortable is by large investment to update a room in our Outside of the waiting room, try to difasking questions in a friendly and nonintrusive manner. It has been found that Retail Strategies is a new column in ADVANCE for Hearing Practice Management. questions starting with “what” can generate It is featured on the homepage of our website, www.advanceweb.com/hearing, where we also maintain an online archive of all columns that appear in stress. It may have taken seven to 10 years the magazine. for a person with a hearing loss to call your practice to schedule a hearing test. Therefore, your receptionist needs to understand homes. Sometimes freshening up a room ferentiate the areas of the office depending the situation and do everything possible to is as easy as a fresh coat of paint, moving on the activities taking place, such as lower the anxiety level during a patient’s some furniture and eliminating clutter; testing, counseling or fitting. Each area first interaction. Try questions that begin it’s the same for your practice. The waiting should reflect the activity taking place in with “May I,” for example: “May I have area can create a lasting impression of your the space. Reposition furniture to create your name?” All staff members should be practice. Is it clean and organized? Does a more conversational consultation area trained to speak slowly and clearly, keeping it feel up-to-date? You can freshen up the if there is enough space in your fitting in mind that most of your patients have a space by painting the walls or even a single rooms, or add a comfortable armchair hearing loss. accent wall with a warm color of paint or and a table. Even the simple act of moving When patients enter the office, make simply by adding fresh plants and a new furniture can give the office a new look at sure someone on the staff acknowledges welcome mat. no cost. them. We all want to feel as if we matter In addition to providing a pleasant, comThese simple steps can help ensure that and that our time is valuable. Greeting fortable area for patients to relax while once you attract new patients to your pracpatients as they enter helps to make them awaiting their appointments, the waiting tice they will feel comfortable and welcome. room also can be a place to educate and Your efforts will help ease any initial fears motivate them. Make sure brochures, edu- and plant the idea that you are someone they cational materials and product displays are can trust. in inviting areas that are easy for patients to access. You might use the waiting area to inform and educate your patients on Tom Nelson, MBA, is channel manager at Oticon Information sponsored by Oticon Inc. www.oticonusa.com all the services you offer, or you might Inc. in Somerset, NJ. 18 ADVance for Hearing Practice management l March/April 2011 w w w.advance web.com/hearing People are our Starting Point Innovation is our Means Empowering people is our Shared Goal Oticon is dedicated to empowering people with hearing loss to communicate freely, interact naturally and participate actively. This dedication comes from an understanding of Let’s Communicate people – and each person’s unique set of abilities. We invite you to work with us to create the future of hearing care and together we will empower the people we serve. Let’s Empower people MAKE A DIFFERENCE! Pedal to Empower in the Oticon booth. Take a 90 second fun and exhilarating virtual bike ride and Oticon will make a donation on your behalf to Lambs Farm, a Chicago based organization with their mission of “Empowering people with developmental disabilities to lead personally fulfilling lives”. Let’s do it together Ask the Experts Behind-the-Ear Hearing Aids What new technology/functionality is becoming available in BTE hearing aids? Jerry L. Yanz, PhD Director of Audiology Hansaton Acoustics device and from external devices to the hearing instruments. A move to RISE2 enabled Oticon to double the original platform’s processing speed, allowing for new capabilities such as Speech Guard and Binaural Noise Management. Today, Oticon’s newest BTEs and other advanced technology hearing solutions built on the RISE2 platform feature an array of advanced technology features including 8kHz bandwidth, automatic decision making and adaptive directionality. For more information: www. oticonusa.com Wit h t he introduction of Hansaton’s AQ X-Mini rechargeable receiver-in-the-canal instrument, rechargeable hearing instruments are no longer a niche market. AQ X-Mini’s patented, inductive, digital charging algorithm yields 20 hours of operation per charge in a 5-year battery, while eliminating battery memory issues and risk of overcharging. An easy-to-use inductive charging station eliminates failure-prone electrical contacts, and Tammara Stender, AuD the sealed battery compartment Senior Audiologist, reduces moisture ingress and preGlobal Audiology vents insertion of the wrong battery. ReSound AQ X-Mini promises to be the most trouble-free hearing instrument H ow d o y o u on the market, with three levels f ut u re-proof of state-of-the-art digital process- a hearing instrument, to meet ing. Recharge your practice with patient needs today and in the Hansaton! future? ReSound presents the For more information: 888- Alera 77/87 configurable behind984-7432, www.hansaton-usa.com, the-ear (BTE) hearing instrument. info@hansaton.com As a standard and power BTE in one, this device has all the wireless capabilities, nanocoating technolDon Schum, AuD ogy and processing capacity of the Vice President, Alera line. The ability to reconfigAudiology & ure the hearing instrument allows Professional the same physical device to be used Relations for a wide range of hearing losses. Oticon Inc. Reconfiguration between open RISE is the first and closed fittings and power levhearing device platform devel- els is easily accomplished through oped with wireless connectivity the fitting software and an earbuilt in at the chip level. Oticon hook change. The result: a large engineers developed RISE to power fitting range that permits a smaller the “next generation” of hearing inventory in the clinic, making it devices with wireless connectivity a smart investment for clinicians that would enable high bandwidth and patients. data transfer and audio transfer For more information: www. from hearing device to hearing gnresound.com 20 ADVance for Hearing Practice management l March/April 2011 A powerful addition to the Alera family. ® Introducing the Alera BTE. The only behind-the-ear instrument that converts easily from a standard to a power BTE in the same model. Adaptable, flexible and powerful, the Alera BTE provides your patients with richer, more robust sound and easy-to-use wireless connections to your television, stereo and phone. · · · · Fits patients with mild to profound hearing loss Provides cable-free, wireless fitting Easy, truly wireless accessories on a 2.4 GHz platform The most flexible, reliable, durable, long-lasting hearing instruments on the market Alera . It Simply Sounds Better. ® Visit us at booth # 1943 www.nostreamers.com Practice profile By Rich Magda Dr. Kathy Mellot operates three offices in Washington D. C. suburbs and sees patients from infants to the elderly. She believes that good business is a matter of building good relationships, not only with patients but with other healthcare providers. The Partnership Approach well. So Dr. Mellott decided to call—early on a Wednesday afternoon, when she knew he would be free—to see if she could use his office to help her get started in private practice. “I was very honest with him,” Dr. Mellott says. “I told him that I was just starting out and didn’t want the rent and other overhead that would come with having my own office. I asked if I could sublet some of his office space on Wednesday afternoons, and he said, ‘Sure, let’s try it.’” When Kathy Mellott, AuD, decided to start a private practice, she harkened back to her high school days. She recalled working as a medical secretary at a radiology practice in Silver Spring, MD. She thought of the otolaryngologist who worked across the hall. She remembered his name—Dr. Robert Baumgartner—and that he didn’t have an audiologist on staff. She also remembered that his office closed on Wednesday afternoons. 22 ADVance for Hearing Practice management The First Steps Dr. Mellott and Dr. Baumgartner drew up a contract specifying the terms of the agreement. In addition to subletting the office l March/April 2011 w w w.advance web.com/hearing ▲ Dr. Mellott figured Dr. Baumgartner would remember her. They had worked together quite often back then, on radiology referrals for his practice. He had been a referral source when she worked as an audiologist in hospitals in the Washington D.C. area as space, she would rent his equipment and use his staff to manage appointments. It was an ideal arrangement on almost every front, for both parties, and the beginning of Audiology Unlimited LLC—Dr. Mellott’s private practice enterprise. While Dr. Mellott was enjoying the perks of running a private practice absent many of the operational costs, this approach would present its own set of challenges. At first, for instance, Dr. Baumgartner would stick around on Wednesday afternoons, during Dr. Mellott’s time in the office. “I was seeing some of his patients, and they were just getting to know me, so I think he wanted to see how I handled them,” Dr. Mellott says. “The patients gave him good feedback advance Kathy Mellott, AuD, built her private practice on relationships with allied health providers. Why miss a decibel of life? Available Summer 2011 Visit booth #1127 at AudiologyNOW! Siemens Aquaris™. It’s waterproof. Enjoy life without limits. The truly waterproof,* ultra-reliable and highly advanced hearing instrument. Discover Aquaris’ unlimited possibilities: www.usa.siemens.com/aquaris Answers for life. *Achieved IP57 rating per IEC 60529 Standard. Device can be completely submerged in water up to 3 feet for 30 minutes with no damage to instrument. Copyright © 2011 Siemens Hearing Instruments, Inc. All rights reserved. 3/11 SHI/11992-11 Practice profile on my services, and after a month or two MD, Public Schools, where she served for six Pennsylvania College of Optometry (PCO), he realized that I’m certified and licensed months as a speech therapist and three years now Salus University. The connection was and good at what I do. One day he handed as an audiologist. In 1981, Dr. Mellott was with an optometrist who saw an opportunity me the keys and said, ‘Lock up when selected for a year-long residency in medical to bolster his practice by offering hearing you leave.’” audiology at Duke University Medical Cen- aid services. He opened College Park HearEarning Dr. Baumgartner’s confidence ter in Durham, NC. She then worked at The ing Services with another audiologist, who would go a long way toward helping Dr. Denver Children’s Hospital before moving left to open her own private practice. After Mellott clear another hurdle—getting her back to the Washington D.C. area to develop she left, he called Dr. Mellott to fill in as he patients to understand that she was an inde- the Neurotology Unit at Suburban Hospital in cycled through CFYs. pendent practitioner, not a technician. “They Bethesda, MD. In 1986, she accepted a faculty “Every time a CFY left, he called me,” called me ‘girl,’” she recalls. “Whenever I position in the Otolaryngology Department Dr. Mellott said. “I would name my price, saw a patient, especially for a hearing aid, I at Georgetown University Medical Center. because I was helping him out. After about would have to reiterate that it was my own Now, imagine starting a private practice after two years of that, he said he wanted me to practice—that Dr. Baumgartner and I were all of that and being called “girl.” come on as the audiologist and asked what colleagues sharing office space. That was one “Thankfully, Dr. Baumgartner deferred to it would take to get me there. We drew up of the hardest things.” me every time on issues regarding hearing a contract and now I provide services there One look at Dr. Mellott’s experience at that aids,” Dr. Mellott said. “That helped a lot. as College Park Hearing Services. I’m there time helps to explain why this was so difficult. And I can also tell you that getting the AuD two days a week, and I use his staff. They do After receiving a bachelor’s degree in speech after my name helped a lot, too. Patients all the scheduling and fax it to me.” and hearing from the University of Mary- think of me as the doctor that I am.” When Dr. Mellott took over College Park land in 1976 and developing a deep interest Hearing Services in 1997, she was working in instrumentation, she earned her master’s Branching Out three days a week as an audiologist—Mondegree in audiology from Towson University, The next venture of Audiology Unlim- days and Fridays there and Wednesdays at near Baltimore. Her clinical fellowship was ited stemmed from a connection Dr. Dr. Baumgartner’s office. Also at that time, obtained through the Washington County, Mellott made while earning her AuD at the she and her husband, Pat, closed a maternity Practice profile well. This arrangement worked well for a few Spreading the Word years, but when the associate left to open her The three offices of Audiology Unlimited own private practice, Dr. Mellott decided to are situated in the northern and eastern scale back at Upper Marlboro, opening only suburbs of Washington D.C. In such a on Tuesdays, allowing her to focus more on highly populated area, the 10 miles between the Silver Spring office, which continued the Silver Spring and College Park offices, to grow. and the 20-plus miles between them and “That’s where we are today,” Dr. Mellott the Upper Marlboro office, are dotted with says. “We forward our phones and our fax many distinct and diverse communities. from Upper Marlboro to our cell phones and Although this location is advantageous Internet fax, so I never miss a call. Patients for the growth of her business—due to know that if they call me, I will either answer the sheer number of potential patients—it or call them right back. And I tell them, nine also forces Dr. Mellott to get creative with out of 10 times problems with new hearing marketing. A regional periodical titled Your Health aids are simple problems and I may be able to answer questions over the phone. If not, Magazine is one of the most successful ways we’ll schedule an appointment. They may Dr. Mellott spreads the word about hearhave to meet me at a different office, but they ing health and the services she offers. Dr. are happy with it.” Mellott pays to publish a self-written article Two of Dr. Mellott’s offices open at 9 a.m., in each issue of the monthly publication, and the Silver Spring office opens earlier. accompanied by her headshot and an adverShe works through lunch and closes at 2 tisement for her practice. p.m. because, in her words, “I start to lose “The article is a great way to reach potenmomentum in the afternoon, and some peo- tial clients,” Dr. Mellott says. “I’ve written ple want to come on their lunch hour.” about everything from advances in hearing Get up and groove. Here’s a little something to move your patients. It’s Groove, the microCIC that plays to the rhythms of everyday living. Designed to slip unnoticed into the second bend of the ear canal, Groove has no extraneous hardware to get in the way of personal style. But even out of sight, Groove shines in difficult, noisy situations. Driven by the quality sound Sonic Innovations is known for plus powerful noise reduction, Groove naturally fits the tempo of your patient’s active life. www.sonici.com ▲ and children’s consignment shop that they had operated as a side business for six years. With two days a week now open, Dr. Mellott was looking to put more time into her private practice. Serendipity struck when she received a phone call from a dentist who was looking for an audiologist to practice at his office in Upper Marlboro, MD. “I asked how he got my name and he said he was just going through the phonebook and calling people with audiology listings,” Dr. Mellott said. “He had been sharing space with an optometrist, but then the optometrist retired. He explained that he had an office, that we would share the waiting room and that our services areas would be separate.” Dr. Mellott and her husband met with the dentist at his office and were intrigued by the opportunity. They conducted some market research and found that she would be the only audiologist in the Upper Marlboro area. Dr. Mellott signed on, and her husband did, too—as office manager. To help manage the caseload, Dr. Mellott hired an associate as Practice profile aid technology to noise exposure and stress-related hearing issues. Whatever it is, the readers really respond. They appreciate that I’m See a photo slideshow of Dr. Mellott's practice in the "From Print" section on providing educational articles and they call about my services. It’s www.advanceweb.com/hearing been very good for me.” Dr. Mellott and her husband also participate in area health fairs and annually promote hearing protection at the Mid-Atlantic Flute clients have custom-fitted earplugs. She also sells a less expensive Fair by fitting musicians with specialized earplugs. Their involve- “ready fit” model. ment in the flute fair dates back five years, to when their daughter “Before the musicians leave my table, I show them how to tell right was in the Mid-Atlantic High School Flute Choir. As Dr. Mellott from left, how to clean them, how to insert them, how to contact was waiting for practice to finish up one day, she noticed how loud me, etc.,” she says. “In five years, I haven’t had anyone call to say it was in the exhibit hall. She then approached an organizer and anything but nice things.” asked how much it would cost to have a display at the fair. Most recently, Dr. Mellott was invited to have a display at the “They said the table would be $75,” Dr. Mellott says. “I decided to annual meeting of the Maryland Music Educators Association. promote musician’s earplugs, and I’ve been doing it ever since.” She was unable to attend due to a scheduling conflict, but her Dr. Mellott makes impressions onsite, at the fair, and sends them extern—Jill McClelland, a fourth-year AuD student at Bloomsto Emtech Laboratories, her ear-mold provider. Within a week, her burg University in northeastern Pennsylvania—went on her behalf. Ms. McClelland returned to report that many visitors asked if Dr. Mellott would have a display at the upcoming Music Educator’s National Conference (MENC) Eastern Regional Conference in Baltimore. “I didn’t know anything about the regional conference, so I looked into it and found out it would cost $750 for a booth,” Dr. Mellott says. “I sent a letter [to MENC] saying that I feel this is a public service, that I really don’t make a lot of money doing it, and that I’d like to be there to get the word out to musicians and music educators from all over the East Coast.” The conference organizers replied, offering a booth at a reduced price, as a public service. “I’m very excited,” Dr. Mellott says. “It’s a great opportunity to talk about hearing health with people who are regularly exposed to high-volume music. That’s my main thing. I don’t lose money, I feel good doing it, and I meet all kinds of fascinating people who tell me about their experiences.” Dr. Mellott leverages the Internet as a business driver, as well. Her website, audiology.homestead.com, provides a brief but thorough history of the practice, biographical information, a list of services and accepted insurance providers, links to her articles from Your Health and links to upcoming community health events. It also includes photo galleries from the community health events and a contact page with information and a map for each office. “The website has pulled in a few clients,” Dr. Mellott says. “I’m directing more and more patients there as I add links and information on hearing health. Web design is something I taught myself, Please visit us at AAA-Audiology NOW! 2011 Booth #1766 so it’s a work in progress.” More than anything, though, Dr. Mellott relies on good-faith, word-of-mouth advertising. She promises a one-week turnaround on all hearing aid orders and repairs and takes calls throughout the day, even after business hours. Good business, she says, is a matter of building good relationships. Being certified by the American Board of Audiology also has been good for referrals. Several patients recently have said they came to Audiology Unlimited because Dr. Mellott is Board Certified. “I have a great connection with my clients,” Dr. Mellott says. “And they all know my slogan: Hear Better, Live Better.” Rich Magda is senior associate editor at ADVANCE. 26 ADVance for Hearing Practice management l March/April 2011 w w w.advance web.com/hearing corporate profile WIDEX Widex, a family-owned company since its inception in 1956, is celebrating its 55th anniversary in 2011. The parent company in Denmark recently completed construction of a new “green” headquarters and also has assumed responsibility for U.S. operations. Through originality, perseverance and reliability, the company’s mission is to develop high-quality hearing aids that give people with a hearing loss the same opportunities for communication as those with normal hearing. "My biggest goal is to increase our distribution channel and service our clients on a broader scale." "High technology is our biggest strength. We will continue to bring on new technology to help people hear better." "When we introduce new functionalities, they must not only work well but also offer true benefits." —Jake Haycock, new president of Widex USA —Jan Topholm, CEO of Widex A/S —Soren Ernstsen, vice president of marketing, Widex A/S Year Founded: 1956 Number of employees: More than 3,000 worldwide Headquarters: Widex A/S: Lynge, Denmark; Widex USA: Long Island City, NY Countries of operation: More than 100 countries worldwide History/Milestones: 1956—Widex is founded in Denmark by Christian Topholm and Erik Westermann and they produce their first hearing aid—the “561.” 1988—With the Widex QUATTRO, four different personalized hearing aid programs are able to be stored and accessed by the wearer via a credit-card-sized remote control. 1995—Widex announces the first fully digital in-the-ear hearing aid—the SENSO—and helps change the hearing aid industry. 1997—The SENSO CIC is displayed in the Smithsonian Institution as an example of how far hearing technology has come. 1999—SENSO Super Power digital hearing aids are featured in an ongoing storyline on the No.1-rated TV show, ER. 2003—Widex introduces CAMISHA laser-fit technology, which uses computer modeling and laser technology that has a profound impact on how hearing aids are manufactured. 2004—Widex hearing aids receive extensive w w w. a d van c e we b. c om / he ar in g "We see Widex not just as a Danish company but as a global company." —Mike Dittmann, vice president of sales, Widex A/S media exposure, with appearances on Good Morning America and Extreme Makeover on the same day. 2005—Widex hearing aids are featured on Larry King Live and other national programs, and CNN recognizes SENSO Diva as a hightech hearing instrument that embodies one of the top 25 innovations of the past 25 years. 2006—Inteo by Widex introduces Audibility Extender and a tailor-made sound experience. 2009—Mind by Widex introduces the highly original Zen program. 2010—Widex BABY440, a hearing aid designed specifically for babies, is introduced. A clinical study at the University of California at San Francisco finds that hearing aids with the Widex-patented Zen Program are promising sound therapy tools for tinnitus management. Erik Westermann receives the Hear for Life Award from the trade journals Audioinfos and Otology, paying tribute to the Widex founder for his decades-long efforts in helping people with hearing loss. Widex A/S purchases its U.S. distributor, the Widex Hearing Aid Company, and assumes responsibility for U.S. operations as Widex USA. Ma rc h /A p r i l 2 011 l 12. 2011—Television actor Ron Rifkin proudly shows off his real-life Widex Passion440 hearing aids on an episode of the prime time ABC-TV show Brothers and Sisters. Products and Services: Widex is the world’s sixth largest manufacturer of hearing aids. Latest Innovations: Clear440; Mind440, 330, 220; Passion440; Zen Program for relaxation and tinnitus management. Future Plans: Widex continues to seek solutions to individual hearing loss. The company is proud that its advanced To hear interviews products also of- with Widex execufer relief from tin- tives, visit the multimedia section nitus and plans to at www.advance continue to con- web.com centrate just as much on the design and comfort of hearing aids as the technology inside them. Corporate Citizenship/Humanitarian Efforts: Its new, entirely CO2-neutral headquarters in Denmark is a major statement about the Widex commitment to good corporate citizenship. Company officials hope that their environmental efforts will be an inspiration to others. In many countries around the world, when it comes to humanitarian causes, Widex continues a history of being discreetly yet actively involved, generous and compassionate. Contact Information: Widex USA, 35-53 24th St., Long Island City, NY 11106, 800-221-0188, www.widexPro.com, www.widexusa.com a DVa n c e fo r H e a r ing P r ac t i c e m a n ag em en t 27 hearing Technology By Donald J. Schum, PhD Rethinking Accessory Devices Additional technology can increase hearing aid benefit. 28 ADVance for Hearing Practice management l March/April 2011 w w w.advance web.com/hearing ▲ There is no doubt that modern hearing aids go a long way toward solving the communication difficulties of our patients. However, for basically any patient, there are going to be some communication situations where hearing aids alone will not meet all hearing challenges. For many years, accessory devices have existed to supplement the benefit provided by hearing aids. With the new age of wireless connectivity in hearing aids, the effectiveness, simplicity and seamless integration of these devices have improved dramatically. This new technology has challenged professionals in our field to take a new look at how acces- Candidacy sory devices can fit into modern patient care. As hearing loss becomes more prevalent, it is logical that the situational limitations of personal amplification will increase as well. With that being stated, The Role of Accessory Devices however, nearly any person with hearing loss will run into situations where Accessory devices always have been of two major types: those that additional technology may increase benefit and satisfaction. A wide range of connect through personal hearing aids (such as FM receivers, compan- hearing aid users most often report problems in three situations: telephone ion microphones, electromagnetic phone signals) and those that are use, television viewing and conversations in particularly noisy situations. independent of hearing aids (such as enhanced alarm clocks, doorbells, These situations can pose a problem even for those with mild to moderate smoke alarms). Both hearing aid manufacturers and independent hearing loss, and all three of these situations have been addressed by a variety companies have developed many different devices over the years to of manufacturers using the new age of wireless technologies. solve specific listening needs that are not completely addressed via Telephone use: Historically, hearing aid users have used telephones hearing aids alone. Accessory devices that are independent of hearing in one of three ways: direct acoustic coupling to the microphone, aids have continued to develop and play an important role in the lives via the T-coil magnetic and magnetic transmission and by simply of those with hearing loss. But the new connectivity landscape has taking the hearing aids out. Despite these options, Kochkin reports greatly changed those devices that connect through hearing aids. that phone use continues to vex hearing aid users.1 The frustration One of the major historical limitations to using accessory devices only has increased with the widespread availability of cell phones, that connect through hearing aids is getting the signal in a form that as those with hearing loss feel like they are falling farther behind. the hearing aid could use while at the same time protecting signal Although home phone use is not without its challenges for those integrity. Until a few years ago, hearing aids only could receive sig- with hearing loss, the gap between the performance of mobile nals either acoustically through the microphone, electromagnetically phones for those with normal hearing and those with hearing loss is through the T-coil or via a direct, hardwired electronic connection even greater due to two reasons. First, in the home environment, the Jeff Leeser (DAI or FM boot). Signals of interest in the environment had to be delivered via one of those three pathways. If the signal could not be delivered appropriately via the acoustic pathways, then the signal had to be converted and delivered to the hearing aid. That conversion and delivery process required specific equipment and, even when available, did not always provide optimal performance for the user (phone use of T-coils being the most common example). With the widespread availability of wireless Bluetooth® signals from mobile phones, there was a natural push for hearing aid manufacturers to find a way to capture these signals and provide them to the hearing aid. Bluetooth, however, is not necessarily a good technology for hearing aids, since the size of its componentry and its power requirements make it impossible to integrate Bluetooth receivers directly into hearing aids. Over the past four years, many different manufacturers have introduced connectivity solutions, initially designed to capture and deliver Bluetooth signals. Two major approaches have been developed using intermediary devices to convert the Bluetooth signal to either a near field magnetic induction (NFMI) signal or a radio frequency (RF) signal. Very quickly, the manufacturers also expanded their connectivity offerings to include capture and delivery of signals arising from sources such as home phones, televisions, computers and navigation systems. Now, for essentially any device that creates an audio signal, there is a solution to get that signal into hearing aids at a high level of sound quality. Celebrate Better Hearing & Speech Month in May! Great gifts from ADVANCE. #16853 NEW NEW #15440 #06504 Personalize SAVE 15% on your order! Quick Custom Embroidery 1-Day Turnaround *Add a personal touch with custom embroidery. One line up to 29 characters on right and/or left chest on polo or dress shirt. From the publishers of Use promo code BHSMAA321 now through 05/16/11. Limit one promo code per order. Cannot be combined with other codes. Not available on clearance items, ADC Digital Pulse Oximeter (#13221), UltraScope (#11840) or Littmann™ stethoscopes. Products featured in this ad include: #14925 – Women’s “Audiology” Polo Shirt #14954 – Men’s “Audiologist” Long Sleeve Dress Shirt Men’s and women’s styles available online Catalog Code: AA-1113 Prices and offers valid through 05/15/11 AA-1113.indd 1 Live operators available 7 days a week to assist you. Download a printable order form from advanceweb.com/AAorderform advancehealthcareshop.com 1-877-405-9978 3/7/11 8:01:07 AM hearing Technology acoustics are somewhat controlled by the person with hearing loss television viewing may significantly enhance the viewing experience, whereas mobile phone use can occur in a wider range of environ- especially for previously difficult-to-understand material.3 ments, many of which include significant competing noise signals. Face-to-face conversations in noise: Hearing aid technologies Secondly, not all cell phones that are commercially available have designed to improve speech understanding in noise, especially good M and T ratings. directionality, have come a long way over the past couple of decades. If a patient does not spontaneously indicate difficulties with home or However, there always will be situations where hearing aids alone cell phone use, do not assume that all is well. It may simply be that the will not completely overcome background noise even for face-toperson has given up trying to use the phone as much as they would prefer, face conversations. Patients say they typically face challenges in perhaps not realizing that new connectivity options exist. environments like noisy, reverberant restaurants and while riding in Television viewing: At first pass, it would seem that special help the car. Wireless companion microphones, designed to supplement with television viewing should not be necessary for a person wearing the benefit provided by ear level amplification, have been developed hearing aids since, if the volume is too low coming from the tele- (Figure 1). These devices piggyback on the new connectivity soluvision, the hearing aid volume control can be used to compensate. tions that currently exist and can provide improvements in the However, the facts tell us that television viewing still causes diffi- signal-to-noise ratio similar to that of FM. Their discreet size and culties for hearing aid users.1 Remember, though, that it is not just seamless integration into total connectivity solutions for patients about sound volume. A variety of other acoustic factors can affect make them popular new problem solvers. the ability to hear and enjoy the signals coming from the television, such as room acoustics, environmental sounds in the home, Initiating the Discussion distance, or other people talking. Turning up the volume on the Providing connectivity options along with newly fit hearing aids television to compensate is typically not an option if other persons is growing in popularity. However, the pattern of behavior amongst with normal hearing also are watching or in the vicinity. professionals tells an interesting story. Examination of professional Again, if patients are not immediately reporting television issues, ordering patterns indicates that some dispensers are providing conthat is no guarantee that all is well. Further, the role of television in nectivity devices to a large proportion of their patients whereas others the life of an older person is different than for a younger adult; TV is are offering very few devices. This pattern suggests that one segment an important connection to society that can be used to compensate of the professional community has decided that connectivity is an for the increasing isolation that is often an inevitable part of the important supplement to the benefit provided by personal hearing aids aging process.2 The new connectivity options that are designed for and that there are options that make sense for many patients. Another segment seems to have adopted a more conservative approach and is using connectivity only as a special-needs solution. It is important to recognize that the role of the professional is to present the very best recommendation to the patient. We all acknowledge that, no matter how far hearing aids have come, there still are areas where patients struggle. Modern, advanced technology amplification can be effectively supplemented by the new age of connectivity options. It is important that the professional not fall into the more traditional mindset that accessory technology is an option that is utilized only when specific patient needs are reported. There is strong enough eviMARCH 2011 dence that connectivity can enhance the perceived benefit provided by amplification, and a strong case can be made that it should be discussed with every patient at some point in the fitting process. Q Finding and Leasing Space for Some professionals are wary of discussing connectivity with a firstHealthcare Practices and Clinics time user due to financial concerns; if the patient already is concerned Thursday, March 31, 2011 • 5:00 PM EDT about the expense of hearing aids, how will he/she respond to the Speaker: Mike Moloney additional expense of connectivity options? However, it is not the responsibility of the professional to make financial decisions for the This practical webinar will bring you up to speed on how to patient. Again, the professional’s responsibility is to provide recomfind space and a good location for your practice or clinic. mendations as to the most effective treatment options. Further, the Topics will include: where NOT to look; ideal locations and pricing of connectivity technologies tends to be a fraction of the total why they are ideal; how much rent to pay; how to find space cost of hearing aids. Given the effectiveness of wireless connectivity at without losing too much of your time; major pitfalls to avoid. enhancing communication in important situations such as telephone use, television viewing and one-to-one communication in highly noisy environments, increasing the total patient cost by 5 to 10 percent should be kept in perspective. FREE WEBINAR FROM ADVANCE Choosing a System Sign up online for these FREE events! www.advanceweb.com/hearing There are a variety of hearing aid manufacturers that now provide wireless connectivity product lines. The professional who is ready to 30 ADVance for Hearing Practice management l March/April 2011 hearing Technology situations are reported by the patient after the initial fitting. However, the significant technical advances in new wireless devices offer alternative, proactive options. A preemptive mindset has the potential to bring both a higher level of benefit to almost every patient and to enhance the health of the professional’s practice. References 1. Kochkin, S. (2010). MarkeTrak VIII: Consumer satisfaction with hearing aids is slowly increasing. Hearing Journal; 63(1): 19, 20, 22, 24, 26, 28 30-32. 2. Schum, D & Sjolander, L. (2011). The Impact of Connectivity for the Older Patient. The Hearing Review. In press. 3. Kreisman, B. (2010). Connectivity and Quality of Life Of Elderly Hearing Aid Users; Paper presented at Audiology Now, San Diego, April. Donald J. Schum, PhD, is Vice President, Audiology & Professional Relations, at Oticon Figure 1. A wireless microphone designed to overcome high levels of background noise during face-to-face conversations. In this configuration, the talkers signal is picked up by a small, body worn microphone (A) with active noise control (B) and converted to a Bluetooth® signal. The Bluetooth signal is sent (C) to a body-worn gateway device, converted to a digital magnetic (NFMI) signal and sent (D) to the hearing aids. embrace this new era of technology is faced with the task of choosing a supplier that makes best sense. Here are some questions to ask when considering which system to use: • Is the system designed for easy use by the patient, especially older individuals? • Does the system integrate seamlessly with hearing aids without a high level of patient manipulation? • Does the system protect sound quality? • How many different connections are possible? Can they be available and operational at the same time? • What accessory devices will the patient have to wear/use? • Can multiple connectivity devices be used easily? • How will connectivity affect battery life in the hearing aid? • Is the system robust, both in terms of wear and tear and also in terms of connection stability? • Does the use of connectivity allow for full access to important hearing aid technologies, or does the choice of connectivity supplier limit hearing aid choices? Total Patient Care Although the primary treatment option for hearing loss is hearing aids, there always is going to be the need to supplement personal, ear-level devices. The professional can continue to treat accessory devices as special-use solutions only when difficult ALL THE RIGHT THINGS 2%: 17%: Hearing aid industry’s rate of growth through the third quarter of 2010* AHAA’s core group of Associates’ rate of growth in 2010, and 16% in 2009 7KRVH¿JXUHVDUHQRWW\SRVDQGFHUWDLQO\GLGQ¶WKDSSHQE\ DFFLGHQW:KHQ$+$$ZRUNVFORVHO\ZLWKSUDFWLFHVWRHQVXUHWKDW WKHLUVWDIIFRQVLVWHQWO\DFFRPSOLVKHVAll The Right ThingsWKH\ WKULYHIt’s that simple. 3UDFWLFHVRIHYHU\VL]HDQGORFDWLRQKDYHEHHQEHQH¿WWLQJIURP VLPSO\LPSOHPHQWLQJWKHSURYHQEXVLQHVVWDFWLFVWKDW$+$$KDV GHYHORSHGRYHUWKHODVW\HDUV²QRPDWWHUWKHVWDWHRIRXU QDWLRQ¶VHFRQRP\ &OHDUO\WKHUHVXOWVVSHDNIRUWKHPVHOYHV&RQWDFWXVWRGD\WR EHJLQ\RXUMRXUQH\WRZDUGVdouble digit growth. *Excludes Veteran’s Administration LEARN MORE @ ADVance for Hearing Practice management 31 AHAANAVIGATOR.COM A ATOR.COM AMERICAN HEARING AID ASSOCIATES ATES A SELECT VISITORS 800.984.3272 hearing Technology for 20 days and professionals can monitor patient progress remotely via the Internet. LACE increases patient satisfaction while reducing HA returns. For more information: 650-241-0066, www.neurotone.com, sales@neurotone.com Advance Guide to Assistive Technology to Enhance Hearing Instruments audifon via Krown Manufacturing Inc. StarPlus-45 Oticon Inc. Amigo FM System audifon introduces via, a wireless CROS/ BiCROS system for hearing losses with one unaidable ear. Its latest digital s t re a m i n g transmission technology is fully design integrated, convincing with brilliant sound quality and a strong resistance to interferences. Developed for fast forward fitting, audifon via does not require calibration. This CROS/ BiCROS system is easily configured and fitted using the audifit software. Ease of handling and technological advances make via the solution for better hearing for everyone with CROS/BiCROS indication. For more information: 800-776-0222, www.audifon.com, contact.audifon@audi fon.com Krown Manufacturing carries a wide variety of assistive technology for use with and without hearing aids. The Krown StarPlus-45 amplified telephone with caller ID offers the latest in telecommunication technology. The StarPlus-45 not only amplifies the incoming voice by 53db gain, its advanced circuit design and its electronic Oticon’s Amigo FM system, including the tamper-proof, light and slim Amigo R12 ear-level receiver, is easily paired with anti-feedback filter make every word clearer Oticon ConnectLine™ and easier to understand without any feed- Oticon ConnectLine connects wirelessly to back or distortion. The StarPlus-45 offers TV and landline phones, enabling effortcaller ID and extra large buttons with high less transitions between functions with just contrast graphics for optimum visibility the push of a button and dialing ease. on the hearing instruFor more information: 800-366-9950, ments’ companion www.krownmfg.com, Karen@KrownMfg. device, Streamer. New com ConnectLine Microphone is a discreet clip-on microphone Neurotone Inc. designed to pick up a LACE - Listening and Communication companion’s voice, filEnhancement ter out surrounding sound and transmit LACE 4 is an interactive, adaptive, aural conversation wirelessly to the user’s hearing rehabilitation program designed for home instruments. ConnectLine solutions optior clinic use, now available on both PC mize the wireless capabilities of Oticon’s and DVD platforms. LACE helps patients advanced technology hearing solutions. develop listening/communication skills and For more information: www.oticonusa. st r ateg ies to com improve speech understanding Pehratek Products in challenging Remote Connect Adapter listening situUse the Remote Connect Adapter with ations. LACE the Oticon Connectline TV transmitter to is easy to use, requires only 20 remotely pick up sounds wirelessly on the minutes a day go at meetings, restaurants and other places Bellman & Symfon Domino Domino is a hearing system that works together with the user’s hearing aids to deliver every word in its natural essence, even in the toughest listening situation. It’s the perfect choice in circumstances where hearing aids just aren’t enough. Listening to a distant speaker at a seminar, enjoying the company of friends at a busy restaurant or watching a favorite TV show, Domino brings out the details and delivers natural-sounding speech directly in the ears. $200 off during promotion period. For more information: Harris Communications, 800-825-6758; Sound Clarity, 888-477-2995; www.bellman.se/us/audio 32 ADVance for Hearing Practice management Safari hearing instruments for an additional boost in classrooms where noise, echo and distance impede audibility and speech understanding. The LED status light indicators on both the Safari hearing instruments and the Amigo FM system enable parents, teachers and other caregivers to be certain that the hearing instruments are functioning properly. l March/April 2011 w w w.advance web.com/hearing hearing Technology where a remote microphone can assist hearing ability. Use RCA wireless listening in restaurants, Dispensers! Take A Minute Take This Quiz ultimate speed and flexibility in direct-to-hearing aid wireless programming. For patients, SurfLink Media provides the f irst set-and-forget media You’ll Love the Results! g Aid Warranty There is a Hearin nts That Will Plan For Your Clie enues Increase Your Rev thing!) (And Cost You No True � False cars, motor homes, at parties or while walking or hiking. For more information: 866470-3532, www.pehratek.com Phonak iCom TVLink Package streaming solution. Simply plug a TV, radio or MP3 player into SurfLink Media and rich, stereo sound is streamed directly to any Wi Series hearing aids in range without pairing or bodyworn relay device. For more information: www. starkey.com � Protect your patients’ hearing aids � Generate more revenue � Strengthen long term dispenser-patient relationships � Call 1-800-525-7936 for your copy of the quiz Phonak presents the Phonak TVLink, an ideal TV experi- TV Ears ence. The dedicated Phonak TV 3D Hearing Kits Link solution offers an unri- TV Ears introduces 3D Hearing valled listening experience. The Kits exclusively to TV Ears cerlow-latency transmission and tified hearing professionals. 3D Hearing Kits solve three of the most frustrating areas of hearing loss: television, telephone conversations and noisy environments. The 3D Hearing Kits will deliver exceptional value to customers and complete a hearing aid package that is more Starkey SurfLink Accessories Wi Series hearing aids connect with Starkey’s innovative Surf Link ™ accessories. The SurfLink Programmer provides March/April 2011 l ĂƐLJ͕ŇĞdžŝďůĞĂŶĚĂīŽƌĚĂďůĞ dŚĞZĞĂůĂƌ&ŝƫŶŐ^LJƐƚĞŵ ƵĚŝŽŵĞƚƌLJ͗ KŶůLJΨϭ͕ϰϵϱ͊ effective than buying hearing aids alone. Become a TV Ears Certified Hearing Center. For more information: 888883-3277, www.tvears.com. For more information on these companies and their products, visit the Online Resouce Directory on www. advanceweb.com/hearing. ADVance for Hearing Practice management 33 &ŽĐƵƐŽŶLJŽƵƌďƵƐŝŶĞƐƐ͕ŶŽƚLJŽƵƌĞƋƵŝƉŵĞŶƚ͊ KīĞƌĂǀĂŝůĂďůĞƚŚƌŽƵŐŚŽƵƚƉƌŝůϮϬϭϭ͘ StereoSound provide excellent sound quality. True plug-andplay and one-step set-up make it ready to go in less than 60 seconds. Used with the iCom, one-button control makes it an extremely simple streaming device. For more information: www. phonakpro.com www.discoverywarranties.com ͻZĞŶƚĂůƐŽůƵƟŽŶǁŝƚŚ ůŽǁĂŶŶƵĂůĨĞĞ ͻ&ƌĞĞƐƵƉƉŽƌƚ ͻ&ƌĞĞƐĞƌǀŝĐĞ ͻ&ƌĞĞĐĂůŝďƌĂƟŽŶƐǁŝƚŚ ŶŽĚŽǁŶƟŵĞ ϭ͗ ŐLJEKt͊ϮϬϭ ůŽ ŝŽ Ě Ƶ ͕ ϱ ϲ ĐĞ͊ ŽŽƚŚηϯϭ ,>&ƚŚĞƉƌŝ ƌ ĨŽ ƚ Ŷ Ğ ƌ Ɛ ƌ͛ 'ĞƚϭLJĞĂ ƵĚŝƚĚĂƚĂEŽƌƚŚŵĞƌŝĐĂ͕/ŶĐ͘ WŚŽŶĞнϭ;ϴϬϬͿϲϯϱϭϳϰϴ ŝŶĨŽΛƌĞĂůͲĞĂƌ͘ĐŽŵͻǁǁǁ͘ƌĞĂůͲĞĂƌ͘ĐŽŵ 5(DG$GYDQFH0DULQGG industry Insider Marketing and Business Strategies What are some innovative strategies to market and operate a hearing practice? For more information: 800984-3272, www.ahaanavigator. com, TMcLaughlin@AHAAnet. com Rick Zaccaria President Active Ear Hearing & Audiology cially trained. AHAA’s focus is on offering its network members compreOur business hensive training programs that strateg y is In addition to providing expert emphasize activities and pro- based entirely on a patient-cencare, a key focus of a success- cesses designed to foster business tric approach. As result, we spend growth and organizational more time counseling and fitting development. Our program, patients and we focus on offer“All the Right Things,” serves ing products and services that practice employees in every role, will enhance our patient’s entire including audiologists, office listening experience. The Smart ful hearing aid practice should personnel and telemarketers. Alert System from Unitron is a be the experience it provides its It is this systematic method of great example of a solution we patients. The ability to provide a performing essential business can offer patients to ensure they good experience takes effective practices and creating good are more aware of their environbusiness and marketing planning patient experiences that drives ment. The Smart Alert System and a motivated staff that is spe- success. enables household alerts such as the telephone, door bell or smoke alarm to communicate directly with hearing instruments. For our patients and their families, this means peace of mind day and night. Unitron’s Smart Alert System is developed in partnership with Bellman & Symfon. For more information: 855327-7767, www.actionear.com, rickz@actionear.com Thomas McLaughlin Sr. Vice President American Hearing Aid Associates (AHAA) Tom Robbins Senior Manager of Audiology Business Development Computers Unlimited Innovations such as a presence on social media websites are extremely popular; however, nothing takes the place of knowing your current and potential customers. Changing the way you collect and analyze customer data is not only innovative, but highly profitable. Beyond tested/ not sold mailings, targeting direct 34 ADVance for Hearing Practice management l March/April 2011 mail to current customers produces quality opportunities at a fraction of the cost. The key to successful marketing is collecting all customer data electronically at the time of service, in a structured manner, for future reference. A well maintained database will continue to produce new revenue far into the future. For more information: 800763-0308, www.timssoftware. com/audiology, tomr@cu.net Nancy Palmere Senior Marketing Manager Oticon Inc. Not innovative, but certainly a proven strategy: Take advantage of marketing/business support provided by hearing care manufacturers. At Oticon, our business support provides access to the newest marketing/business strategies to help practitioners differentiate their practices, increase positive client outcomes and improve the bottom line. We recognize that practitioners have very different needs depending on their practice settings, and we have identified the specific needs of different customer groups and developed marketing programs and customized solutions most effective and appropriate for each. Business development is the focus of Oticon’s knowledgesharing initiatives, including marketing meetings for retailoriented practitioners and more medically focused forums for clinicians working in hospitals and ENT clinics. We also offer Blueprint Solutions, Healthy Hearing and other practice management tools to help practitioners stay in touch with their patient base via direct mail and other marketing/ promotion strategies. For more information: www. oticonusa.com w w w.advance web.com/hearing SPONSORED BY BUILDING YOUR PRACTICE THROUGH EDUCATIONAL SEMINARS ducational seminars are an effective way to increase awareness of hearing loss and hearing solutions in a way that positions you and your practice as authoritative and caring community resources. Educational seminars appeal to people beginning to explore options for addressing their hearing loss and to those who are not ready or still considering what actions to take. These information-sharing events are a non-threatening way to learn about hearing loss without the pressure to act immediately that some might feel in a one-on-one consultation. The information you provide can be the catalyst to motivate those with untreated hearing loss to finally take action. A seminar also lets you support current hearing instrument users with tips and suggestions to improve communication. It is a great forum to inform them of new technology, such as wireless connectivity, that can make a positive difference in their lives. BECOME THE EXPERT No matter where you hold a seminar —your office, a retirement community, local restaurant, community center or other facility — you become the expert in hearing and hearing health care. This is an ideal opportunity to talk about how you practice hearing care and what makes your practice unique. Highlight the services you offer and explain what patients might expect when they are in your care. The friendly setting allows you to make a connection to the participants and begin to build a bond that can extend beyond the seminar session. Enlist a current patient to share his or her story to show the potential of modern hearing solutions to empower people to engage more fully in life. Make your guests feel welcome, comfortable and glad they came. Capture the name, address and email of everyone who attends. This will enable you to maintain the connection through thank-you notes and follow-up mailings to the attendees. Ensure everyone can hear the speaker and see the slide show. If the seminar includes a demonstration, the presenter should still talk to each participant and answer questions. Have your appointment book handy. Make an effort to meet with each attendee, and ask whether they would like to book an appointment based on what they have learned at the seminar. MARKETING THE EVENT Seminars are a cost-effective way to conduct new patient outreach. Depending on the location, advertising your event can be as simple as posting flyers or posters at a community center or clubhouse. For some seminars, advertising in the local newspaper enables you to reach a larger audience of potential clients. If the seminar is held in a public forum such as a local library or community center, you may be able to promote your seminar in the events calendar of the local newspaper or on the community website. Use your website, your newsletter and emails to inform current patients of the event and ask them to invite a friend who may need amplification. Oticon developed Success Tips for Planning Your Patient Educational Seminar to help you plan and conduct effective educational seminars. This easy-to-follow guide helps you set objectives for your seminar and walks you through the steps of holding a seminar, from planning to follow up to measuring your success. There are practical tips, places for notes and checklists. Oticon Sales Representatives are also available to discuss the logistics and benefits of conducting an educational seminar. For information and to request your copy of the Success Tips brochure, contact your Oticon representative today. Q 2 BUILDING REVENUE | ADVANCE FOR HEARING PRACTICE MANAGEMENT | MARCH/APRIL 2011 Turning Insights Into Action When selecting hearing instruments, there is no such thing as one size fits all. Through enduser insights, Oticon has learned that it isn’t just about the peripheral hearing system we are supporting: it’s the whole person. A holistic approach to audiology recognizes that patients’ auditory abilities and cognitive skills differ and the key to true client satisfaction lies in treating the person as an individual. The Oticon product portfolio empowers people to communicate freely, interact naturally and participate actively. PERFORMANCE PREMIUM Agil ADVANCED Acto ESSENTIAL Ino DESIGN POWER Dual Chili CONNECTIVITY ConnectLine FM Amigo PEDIATRICS Safari Learn more at oticonusa.com or call 1.800.526.3921 BUSINESS STRATEGIES FOR SUCCESS >> BY RONALD GLEITMAN, PHD, DIRECTOR, PRACTICE MANAGEMENT, SIEMENS HEARING INSTRUMENTS, INC. earning practice management skills is essential to keeping your practice on track. It’s a big subject, but I can share with you some of my favorite rules of thumb. KEY PERFORMANCE INDICATORS The numbers don’t lie.Your systems should track your key performance indicators, a key aspect of performance management and an objective measure of your practice’s success. These indicators include: new patient acquisition, call to appointment ratio, cost of patient acquisition, close rate, binaural rate, ASP (average selling price), return rate, and your marketing return on investment. THE BUSINESS PLAN The business plan serves as a road map to implement change or manage your practice. It permits analysis of all aspects of the business such as projected income, expenses, marketing, staffing issues, patient management, competition and goal setting. The business plan helps you to stay competitive, measure your practice, and set goals. Leg one is internal marketing, which is centered around communication with your patient database to keep them coming back. Ask yourself what you want to communicate and how frequently. The primary goal of internal marketing is to take your patient out of the market place where your competitors are marketing. Leg two is external advertising, which will help you get new potential end-users into your practice. This includes internet, television, radio, and newspaper advertising as well as direct mail, billboards, and other print advertising. Leg three tackles how you are going to get more physician referrals. First, internal physician marketing involves increasing referrals from the physicians of your current patients. Then, external physician marketing lets primary care physicians know who you are, where you are and why you exist. Build a list of the area physicians you want to target with your market and a strategy on how you are going to get into their referral system. For information on Siemens services that can help you make the most of your business, contact your Siemens Sales Representative at (800) 766-4500. Q OPTIMIZING YOUR PATIENT DATABASE Optimizing your patient database consists of retaining current user base through various communications such as telemarketing, direct mail, and face to face office visits. WHERE YOUR PRACTICE STANDS Take the SWOT approach to evaluating your business. Identify your Strengths (what does your practice do well), Weaknesses (what need improvement at your practice), Opportunities (where do you see your practice in the future), and Threats (how are you threatened in your practice?) to manage your practice successfully. SETTING SMART GOALS Make sure your goals are SMART: Specific, Measurable, Actionoriented, Realistic, and Time-bound. As an example, “I will raise my average selling price to $2,100 per device utilizing Top Down Selling and the Client Oriented Scale of Improvement (COSI) by the end of the second quarter of this fiscal year.” All goals need to be reviewed regularly. THREE-PRONGED APPROACH TO MARKETING Divide your marketing efforts into what I call a Marketing Tri-Pod. 4 BUILDING REVENUE | ADVANCE FOR HEARING PRACTICE MANAGEMENT | MARCH/APRIL 2011 Why miss a decibel of life? Introducing Siemens iMini™. There’s CIC, and then there’s the invisible iMini. Advanced hearing technology in its tiniest and most colorful form. www.usa.siemens.com/imini Answers for life. Copyright © 2011 Siemens Hearing Instruments, Inc. All rights reserved. 1/11 SHI/11862-11 practice management By Brian Taylor, AuD Achieving Success in 20 Questions If you grew up in the 1950s, you might remember the popular television game show “20 Questions,” in which one player chose a subject and the others had to try to guess what it was by asking up to 20 yes-orno questions. Today, the 21st century equivalent of the game is simply called 20Q and, like many activities, is available to be played online. Besides being entertaining, the 20Q concept encourages creativity and deductive reasoning. The 20 questions posed below are intended to get you more engaged in the nuts and bolts of running a practice and enable you to think more strategically about your business. Implement the tactics suggested for each question, and you have an excellent chance to “win” in your practice. 1. Do you know what you want your practice to be known for? This question allows you to determine your unique selling proposition (USP)—that distinct, appealing idea that sets your practice apart from your competitors as well as other related businesses where customers can choose to spend their hard-earned dollars. For example, as a potential customer is deciding how to spend discretionary income, cosmetic surgery or hiring a personal trainer may be competing with the idea of getting hearing aids. Your USP is likely to revolve around just five possibilities: price, product, technology, customer service, or memorable patient experience. It’s up to you to determine which of these five dimensions is your USP and to design your practice’s goals, objectives and marketing tactics around the dimension for which you want to be known. nesses, opportunities, and threats to your business is a proven way to get started on long-range planning. 4. Do you have a plan with specific, measureable objectives? Once you have established a long-range plan and set goals, you need 3. Do you have a long-range plan for growth? If you have not planned to make sure your staff understands their job assignments with or thought about your long-range plans for success, you could be enough detail so there are no misunderstandings as to what is moving in the wrong direction and not know it until it is too late. expected of them each day. The key to this point is to provide clear Opportunities to generate profits may be lost. communication and coaching in order for each employee to know Develop a long-range planning procedure and review this plan how their efforts contribute to the success of the organization. periodically. You may need to modify it as the economy or your com- Conducting weekly one-on-one meetings with each member of petitive landscape changes. Long-range planning often starts with a your staff to review their projects and tasks is a great way to build strengths, weaknesses, opportunities, and threats (SWOT) analysis. a personal relationship with them as well as ensure things are getBrainstorming with your staff and identifying the strengths, weak- ting done. 40 ADVance for Hearing Practice management l March/April 2011 w w w.advance web.com/hearing Jeff Leeser 2. Do you have specific business goals? Many practice managers are so busy taking care of their patients that they don’t have the time to plan. In short, planning means you are setting some clear performance goals for your practice. These goals typically revolve around raising the bar on either productivity (seeing more patients, dispensing more hearing aids) or quality (taking better care of patients or operating more efficiently). practice management J\\=fi Pflij\c] allow you to foster a deeper bond with patients. In addition, taking the time to incorporate these tests as well as other more cutting-edge proFigure 1. Adding value in the margin cedures, like speech mapping will ensure loyal patients. and computer-based auditory training, add value to your offerings. As Figure 1 suggests, 5. Do you set clear expecta- there is no better way to feel tions? Based on years of experi- good about the retail prices ence we know that owners and you charge than adding value managers who take the time to by providing innovative serplan and set goals often have vices and tests during your ina far greater chance of being teraction with patients. successful. After setting goals, be sure to clearly communicate 8. Do you have a selling proyour expectations for accom- cess? It’s surprising how many plishing your goals. clinicians leave the consultation with the patient up to chance. Tak6. Do you have an of fice ing the time to develop a formal management system? In ad- consultation process will make it dition to either a web-based likely that you move the patient :XgK\c:Xgk`fe\[K\c\g_fe\ Add value to the patient's experience by bundling warranties, batteries and office visits into the price of hearing aids. or stand-alone office management system, you need a process in which you book appointments, schedule recall visits and mine your existing database as part of a systematic patient retention program. Paying attention to your patient pipeline through diligent management of it will ensure you have a steady supply of patients coming through your doors. March/April 2011 l 9. Do you add value to the patient’s experience in your office? One way to add value is to bundle warranties, batteries and office visits into the price of the hearing aids. Any time you are bundling goods and services into the price, it enables the customer to look at the long-term value of your offering. You a lso ca n conduct a patient experience audit. Start by recording all the points of contact you have with a typical patient, such as shown in Figure 2. Once you have recorded all these points of contact, ask yourself, “What does my staff need to do in order to make the experience for the patient memorable and engaging?” ADVance for Hearing Practice management 41 :XgK\c ZXgk`fe\[k\c\g_fe\j_fnj nfi[$]fi$nfi[ZXgk`fejf]\m\ipk_`e^ XZXcc\ijXpj_\cg`e^g\fgc\kfle[\ijkXe[ \m\ipnfi[Ç\m\e`]k_\p_Xm\[`]ÔZlckp _\Xi`e^`k% 5 Gfn\i]lcXdgc`ÔZXk`felgkf*,[9 5 <Xjp$kf$i\X[[`jgcXpn`k_ZfekiXjkZfekifc 5 I\m`\nZXgk`fej[li`e^fiX]k\iXZXcc 5 <eXYc\jgXk`\ekkf_\Xin_Xkk_\pZXe Xe[i\X[n_Xkk_\pe\\[kf :Xcckf[Xp(%/''%)**%0(*'M&KKP 0)-:fcfiX[f8m\el\ JXekXDfe`ZX#:80'+'($).(. \dX`c1jXc\j7n\`kYi\Z_k%Zfd (%/''%)**%0(*'M&KKP ▲ 7. Are you relying on the tests and procedures you learned in graduate school to make clinical decisions? Based on MarkeTrak VIII data, there is a relationship between pre-fitting test protocol execution and patient satisfaction. Taking the time to implement more engaging pre-fitting tests like the Quick SIN, Acceptable Noise Level and TELEGRAM will from one point to the next and that you ask them to do business with you. practice management Figure 2. The various patient points of contact, along with optimum time of appointment. Those listed on the bottom of the line are in-direct points of contact with your practice, such as visits to your website. set at least part of the agenda 10. Do you generate and track is a great way to build mutuword-of-mouth referrals? Be- al trust. After all, it is largely cause word-of-mouth referrals trust that allows you to focus add virtually no extra cost to on what you do best while your your bottom line, it makes staff completes other imporperfect sense to try and get tant daily tasks. During your as many of them as possible. weekly sessions, be sure to set There are several ways you can aside time for each member generate more word-of-mouth of your staff to bring up items referrals; all of them rely on they want to discuss. your ability to work your patient retention plan. 13. Do you provide your staff with constant feedback? As 11. Does your staff have a clear the practice owner or manunderstanding of what is ex- ager, one of your primary repected of them? What seems sponsibilities is to lead your obvious to you may not be so staff and to expect them to be for your staff. Employees have a continually improving at their strong desire to know how their job. One way to let them know time and efforts contribute to how they are performing, both the success of the practice. You what they are doing well and can start by asking members what needs improvement, is to of your staff how they create bathe them in constant feedvalue and how they rank their back about their performance. daily priorities. Once you gain agreement on what their pri- 14. Do you provide coaching to orities should be, you can dis- your staff? Beyond providing cuss exactly how their efforts feedback, you need to make are intended to contribute to sure your staff is continually the practice’s success, such as improving or taking on greater shown in Figure 3. If you’re not responsibilities. By directing sure of the answer, ask your them to the appropriate restaff to answer this question. sources you can be sure they continue to fine-tune or im12. Do you have weekly one-on- prove their skills. one meetings with your staff? In order to build an effective 15. Do you have an obsession business relationship with with quality? Quality is that each member of your staff, difficult-to-define term that can it’s important to get to know be a huge competitive advanthem as a person. During your tage and ensure that you comweekly, one-on-one meetings mand an above-average selling (Question 4), letting your staff price for your products and 42 ADVance for Hearing Practice management l March/April 2011 practice management Figure 3. All staff need know how they contribute to at least one of these three variables. Weekly meetings, feedback and coaching all revolve around striving to improve these three dimensions of practice productivity. services. In short, customers rave about Start by knowing how you want to price quality when they experience it. As shown products; do you want to be the low-end or in Figure 4, there are three dimensions to high-end player in your market, or do you quality: effectiveness, which is your ability want to play in the middle ground? to execute evidence-based clinical procedures; efficiency, which is your ability to 19. Do you have a marketing strategy? Most work patients through your process in a business owners agree that at least 10 perthorough manner; and emphasis on re- cent of annual revenue needs to be reinsults. By taking the time to measure hear- vested into marketing. Once you have esing aid outcome as well as several aspects tablished a marketing budget, the next step of your interaction with the patient, you is to create a plan. Typically, owners like to are more likely to become the provider of devise a monthly calendar that plans out choice in your area. the entire year. In addition to pre-planning an entire year, it’s important to use a wide 16. Do you have a passion for the mundane range of marketing tactics and measure the details, such as fixed costs and margins? return on investment for each. It’s not enough to look at the final results on a monthly basis. Successful business 20. Do you get a sense of accomplishment managers know the details of their busi- from managing your business? In today’s ness. Knowing about your variable and incredibly hectic world of business, the fixed costs, cash flow and accounts pay- ability to simplify and find small, increable and receivable on a daily basis is mental areas to improve in your practice important to success. For example, fixed is the key to finding long-term success. In Give yourself the competitive advantage of quality by being effective, efficient and emphasizing results. Figure 4. The 3 Es of quality Figure 5. The Pyramid of Success shows the things it takes to be successful in a hearing aid dispensing practice. w w w.advance web.com/hearing costs are those that you accrue even his long and very successful career, John when you are not dispensing hearing aids. Wooden, the coach of the UCLA men’s When left unchecked, fixed costs can have basketball team, won 14 national chama devastating consequence to the bottom pionships. Much of Wooden’s unprecline of your practice. Review this data of- edented success was not the direct result ten and update your budget as needed. of his ability to recruit top talent or coach during the game. Rather, he attributed 17. Do you have an annualized budget with his success to being an effective teacher revenue and product mix objectives? In and leader. During his tenure, he creorder to maintain a vision for your com- ated the “Pyramid of Success” (Figure 5), pany (Question 1) you need to align costs, which schematically shows the essential revenue and margins with your vision. characteristics and behaviors needed to A budget serves as a template for your be successful. The concept of the Pyramid of Success monthly revenue and unit targets. has great utility for managers and owners 18. Do you have a retail pricing strategy? of audiology practices and can provide a There are a couple of reasons it is absolute- foundation for long-term success. As you ly critical to have a clear pricing strategy. move up your pyramid, the skills required Without one, it’s easy to fall into the trap to be successful become more complex and of providing discounts (cutting a deal) finally culminate in your ability to identify with every customer that comes through areas of improvement and simplify essential your door. A pricing strategy also helps processes. Asking yourself and your staff you build a budget. If you are able to main- the 20 questions posed above will help you tain a precise retail price, you can plug get to the top. that number into a monthly or annual unit forecast that will enable you to project revenue over the course of a year. You sim- Brian Taylor, AuD, is director of practice developply cannot do this without stable pricing. ment and clinical affairs for Unitron US. March/April 2011 l ADVance for Hearing Practice management 43 resource directory optimal hygiene maintenance. These kits may be helpful to clients in reducing buildup of harmful bacteria, fungi and viruses, preventing eczema and needed. Nine sizes in 17 ear infection and promoting well-functioncolors are available for ing hearing instruments. There are two kits all makes and models available for purchase: one for Standard of BTE devices. Made Tubing/Earmolds and one for ITE/Slim/ in USA. micro Tubes. For more information: For more information: www.phonakpro. 866-644-2500, www.hearingaidsweatband. com com, info@hearingaidsweatband.com Advance Guide to Hearing Aid Accessories Discovery Warranties and Repair Discovery Warranties offers comprehensive service warranties on all makes and models of hearing aids. Discovery compensates dispensers for t hei r t i me and efforts with a rebate on each w a r r a nt y s old or renewed, and the user-friendly system requires minimal paperwork with a streamlined process to file claims. Discovery Repair is a rapid-response, full-service, all-make repair company offering the advantage of experience in repairing older and newer instruments. For more information: 800-525-7936, www.discoverywarranties.com, www.dis coveryrepair.com, discoverywarranties@ discoverieswarranties.com VARTA Designed for people on the go, power one Established in 1976, Hearing Technologies ACCU plus rechargeable batteries and International Inc. is a leading designer of cordless chargers hearing aid care products that are designed are quickly gainfrom the hearing aid ing popularity for wearer’s point of view. reliability and conIts products are disvenience. Made in Germa ny, t hese tributed by many of batteries contain the world ’s leading 0 percent mercury manufacturers and distributors includ- and are manufactured according to strict ing Hal-Hen (AAA booth 1358), Oaktree environmental and quality standards. Ear Gear Products (AAA booth 1760), and Warner Available in all popular sizes, rechargeable Ear Gear hearing instrument armor is an Tech-Care Products (AAA booth 1254). batteries require little sales effort and can acoustically transparent, water-resistant, For more information: 800-553-6003, www. result in dependable profits. Power one sales d o u b l e - w a l l hearingtech.com, harvey@hearingtech.com deliver continuous revenue, high profit margins and the opportunity to interact with spandex nylon sleeve that proyour customers more often. tects hearing Pehratek Products For more information: 800-468-2782, ext. i n s t r u m e n t s AID-GRIP offers a revolutionary new way 203, www.powerone-batteries.com from dirt, sweat, to securely grip open ear devices onto the moisture and ear to prevent loss loss. At AudiologyNOW!, Ear Gear will and improve wear- Warner Tech Care Products Inc. have all of its models on display, from those ing comfort. It offers Located in Roseville, MN, Warner Tech Care that fit the smallest RIC to those for cochlear a double-backed Products Inc. stocks and provides an everimplants. The company also will introduce adhesive cushioned increasing line of hearing aid accessories. retention pad that has Warner prides itself on being a single-source its latest model, Ear Gear ITE. For more information: 888-766-1838, been specifically designed for miniature OTE supplier that helps audiologists provide www.gearforears.com, AAA booth 1463 devices to secure them to the back of the ear better hearing. Accessory products can for active users. Hypo-allergenic material enhance hearing, encourage hearing aid gently grips the back of the ear to hold the hygiene and proHearing Aid Sweat Band device securely and can be used for many tect your patients’ Protect patient hearing from damaging days. Each package comes with a 30-day sup- hearing aid investment with useful moisture. The Hearing Aid Sweat Band ply of GRIP-AID retention pads. is made from specially designed all-natuFor more information: 866-470-3532, products. Warner provides a full array of ral fabric that sheds moisture, protecting www.pehratek.com products, from oto blocks used in taking hearing aids from the damaging effects impressions to the newest hearing aid dryof moisture. This enables wearers to leave ers and the newest ALDs in the industry. A their hearing aids in place during high- Pho nak new full-color catalog is available. For more information: 800-328-4757, www. perspiration sport activities or any time The Phonak Cleansing & Care Kit includes a protection from moisture, dust and dirt is wide range of products and tools to ensure warnertechcare.com, AAA booth 1254 44 ADVance for Hearing Practice management Hearing Technologies International Inc. l March/April 2011 w w w.advance web.com/hearing also s. s s you. elone may ew ay of he has know ause ouch good rage w. g even MOUNTAIN of students require amplified oral Audiologists measure classroom instruction on any given day. acoustics and ambient noise and help MOUNTAIN Unfortunately, notinto school administrators carefully select Are you considering a careerschools move? Putoften your jobdo search high gear with ADVANCE for Hearing Practice Management! 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Our jobs online are updated daily, so be sure to search our site often to get the jump on the latest openings. You can search our online jobs by state or by job title. It’s convenient and easy! But, be sure your subscription to ADVANCE for Hearing Practice Management is current— our online jobs feature is accessible to current ADVANCE Sound field amplification systems subscribers only. Not sure if your FREE subscription is current? Justuse checkmicrophones, your mailing label onamplifiers the front coverand of this issue. Classroom Technology speakers to amplify oral instructions ADVANCE for every student —Practice regardless of ADVANCE for Hearing Management connects 18,000 hearing locationwith or hearing ability.healthcare They give professionals nationwide every issue.a better every person in the classroom Classified Employment opportunity to succeed.ads are arranged geographically by state within each region But not all sound field amplification systems are the same. Audiologists should become knowledgeable about the differences between the various sound field technology offerings available. 1 National . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . p. 45 Argument for Sound Field Despite the many advantages of sound field amplification systems, school administrators may be reluctant to implement them because of budgetary restraints. Audiologists should give decisionmakers relevant information and advice detailing why sound field technology is necessary, what solutions can optimize sound quality, where they should be installed and, most importantly, how they can be funded. A good strategy is to expose administrators to the technology. They may fight for it after discovering its impact. AUDIOLOGIST Immediate part-time position available in ENT office in Cedar Grove, NJ. CCC and New Jersey license required. Laura.a.rossimd@verizon.net or Fax: 973-239-3579 RENEW TODAY! 800.355.1088 w w w.advance web.com/hearing Organization NATIONAL ing lives through better hearing. Miracle-Ear has been the leader in our industry for over 60 years and our franchise is over 20 years old. We have locations in East Bay CA, NY (including Long Island, Nassau County), MA, CT, NE, IA, KY, IN, and WA. We are a profitable, A Astable ED I T Fwith I LaLsolid E Rvision3 for / 0our 5 future. (All states require company licensing and some college credits.) We will help provide all training to become licensed. Avada Hearing Care Centers has been in business for decades in our local markets. Our organizaƟon has been able to not only survive, but grow and thrive due to our over 390 years of combined Ask yourself if a fitting experience. software senior management system under consideration is usable Here Today, Here Tomorrow. NEW ENGLAND Evaluating Fitting Software, Part 3 NEW ENGLAND You can expect: • $400/week training salary for 2 months/$400/week draw against commissions • 401(k)/25k life insurance • 50% healthcare, dental and vision coverage • Promotional trips, incentives • Aggressive national and local advertising using multi-layered target marketing via TV, direct mail, newspaper, etc. • Fully equipped professional office with existing patient base NEW ENGLAND Field Benefits, PACIFIC DosSound and Don’ts 1 PACIFIC for Part Cleaning Position Summary Sound field amplification in the To keep hearing aids clean, strive to PACIFIC classroom encourages improved test clean them every day. Additionally, do scores. In the Mainstream Amplification SOUTHWEST not use alcohol for cleaning, don’t Resource Room Study (MARRS), nearly If you wish to help usaids improve quality of life of others, expose hearing to the emollients, SOUTHWEST every student we wantreported to hear fromthat you. they were resumes hearing to carlcase@frasierenterprises.com do notE-mail expose aids to high able to payorattention when a wireless SOUTHWEST fax 518-736-2285 temperatures or water, avoid dropping sound field system amplified their UPPER ATLANTIC hearing aids onSOUTH hard surfaces, teachers’ voices. They also were able to or trampling placing excessive UPPERorSOUTH ATLANTIC shut out distractions and follow pressure on them. UPPER SOUTH ATLANTIC instructions more easily than before Tell your patients that they also the system was installed. WEST NORTH CENTRAL should not keep dead batteries, use hair care NORTH products CENTRAL while wearing WEST hearing aids, or keep hearing aids WEST NORTH CENTRAL turned on when not in use. The Hearing Instrument Specialist is responsible for the identification and rehabilitation of the hearing impairment including determining the appropriateness and benefit of amplification. This is a great opportunity for high achievers to learn a new industry that is poised to take advantage of advancements in technology within the growing hearing aid market. WEST SOUTH CENTRAL WEST SOUTH CENTRAL WEST SOUTH CENTRAL Evaluating Fitting Software, Part 1Benefits, Sound Field There are eight Part 2 criteria for TIME TO RENEW determining if a given fitting software Sound field amplification can program is right for your practice. facilitate mainstreaming of students First, determine if the program is a with hearing loss. Because these universal fitting tool. Multimedia students can stay in mainstream designed to fit one type of instrument classes, stigma is eliminated, as well or devices from one manufacturer as the segregation and restrictions will leave you disappointed. students often face when placed in Multimedia works best when special education classes. integrated into nearly every fitting and counseling appointment. ad 410, or email your resume and letter of interest to careers@avada.com. Evaluating Fitting New England Florida Software, Part 4 New York Opportunity Knocking?… Carolinas Beware equipment-intensiveVirginia We’re Pounding!!! packages that can turn into a cord, Beltone Newand England is growing! With over placement shared-use nightmare. 120 locations throughout New England, Florida, Most Carolina, computers nowCarolina, are Internet-, North South Virginia, and New York State, we are seeking amazing, dynamic wireless-, and multimedia-equipped. individuals to join our team! If you are an Adding a high-quality presentation Audiologist or Dispenser who wants to be on monitor and of a pair mounted the “UP” side this of business, please e-mail your resumemay to mandreozzi@BeltoneNE.com or speakers be all it takes for fax to 401-921-1993. We are an award-winning an optimal set-up. company and offer a fantastic compensation package. All inquiries will be held in the strictest confidence. If you have been thinking of selling your practice, we may be interested in purchasing it. Call Michael Andreozzi at 401-921-3320 x102. YOUR FREE www.BeltoneNE.com SUBSCRIPTION Evaluating Fitting Software, Part 5 CALL 800.355.1088 Your new fitting software program should allow for add-ons. Look for modules that address rehabilitation, after-care programs and report-printing options. Also ask about product support and cost of future upgrades. Evaluating Fitting Software, Part 2 Determine if the software is customization-friendly. It should have a volume of materialsMarch/April that 2011 you can coalesce into different presentations that you can save and recall as needed. The system also should readily address different types of patients, degrees of experience with throughout the fitting process. Such a Join Our Team! system should be appropriate for every • Over 280 Nationwide Locations situation, from the identification of • Competitive Salary hearing loss well into the future. It also • Bonuses should modules that address • Greatinclude Benefits • Proven Marketing Programs as rehabilitation and new technologies Apply online atavailable. www.avada.com referencing they become WWW.ADVANCEWEB.COM/JOBFAIRS l ADVance for Hearing Practice management 45 career opportunities can uable nize hires Ev So N cos bec eff diff dia tes cou bill sys num ben Ev So T yo pro pa are H inv sp Al us wi it m By Barry Freeman, PhD Point of view Educating the Public The National Council for Better Hearing (NCBH) was founded in 2010 with a mission to provide the public with educational and professional resources so people can live with healthy hearing. The NCBH Board of Directors is comprised of leading hearing healthcare educators and providers who are dedicated to bringing broader access to and understanding of current hearing care options including the diagnosis, prevention, management and treatment of hearing loss. The ultimate goal is to ensure that consumers get the quality care and guidance they need to make informed decisions about hearing healthcare. The board believes that if consumers are mation on hearing loss and hearing aids. provided with the right knowledge, they Despite still being in its infancy, the site will be empowered to better deal with the has moved to the top of most search engines causes, complications and treatments of and is averaging more than 38,000 conhearing loss. To that end, NCBH is dedi- sumer contacts per month. cated to educating and helping people Among the most frequently visited achieve the healthiest hearing lives pos- portions of the site is the “Your Hearing sible, and the NCBH Board is focused on Journal” section. Here, consumers can build providing the most current and relevant personal journals and libraries of informainformation about hearing healthcare and tion on hearing loss and hearing aids. As extending connections to hearing professionals who can guide patients in their journeys to healthier hearing. loss can severely and negatively impact one's ability to communicate, acquire economic prosperity and enjoy life. As research and technology rapidly advance, there already have been dramatic improvements in the understanding and treatment of hearing loss. Without question, these advancements will continue, and it is incumbent on the hearing profession to maintain a The values of NCBH include: • Dedication to improving the overall hearing health and wellbeing of those dealing with hearing loss; • Working with leading hearing care professionals and other key partners to expand access to educational materials to help people acquire the care they need; • Supporting the hearing professional and patient relationship by empowering people with information, guidance and tools so they can make the hearing health decisions that are personally right for them. As more people with hearing loss gain access to the Internet, they are searching for a credible and neutral third party that can provide them with information on management and treatment of hearing loss. To accomplish this goal, NCBH sponsors the new consumer hearing education website, www.Hearing-Aid.com. Since it went live in September 2010, this site has gained a reputation as a valuable resource for infor- they read an article or find information rel- well-informed public. NCBH accepts a role evant to their personal hearing needs, they in the dissemination of information to the can save the information to their journal public by helping people better understand for future reference. Without question, hearing loss and the advances in hearing today’s consumer has more access to infor- aid technologies, as well as professional mation than ever before. NCBH, through care options through sponsorship of HearHearing-Aid.com, compiles and organizes ing-Aid.com. this information for the consumer. Of course, as Hawkins notes, as consumers Reference gain this information, they will push the 1. Hawkins, DB. (2010). Perspectives. “Best practice” limits of practitioners and demand qual- and the well-informed hearing aid patient: Are you ity services that adhere to best practice ready? Audiology Today, 22(5): 64-65. guidelines.1 Hearing loss currently affects more than 36 million people in the U.S. and an esti- Barry Freeman, PhD, is board chair of the National mated 650 million globally—a number Council for Better Hearing and senior director of projected to increase in the next several audiology at Starkey Laboratories. Contact him at decades. Left untreated, even mild hearing barry_freeman@ncbh.org. 46 l Outreach ADVance for Hearing Practice management March/April 2011 w w w.advance web.com/hearing CELEBRATE BETTER HEARING & SPEECH MONTH - MAY 2011 You trust ADVANCE for clinical & industry information, so why not turn to ADVANCE for custom gifts & giveaways to celebrate Better Hearing & Speech Month 2011. Whether you choose to add your facility logo or one of our ADVANCE Exclusive Designs, your custom Better Hearing & Speech Month product will surely turn heads. Regardless of your quantity needs or budget parameters, we’ll create a custom product specifically for your staff or special event. Not sure where to begin? Let our experts do all the work, including researching product options and suggesting creative imprinting ideas that fit this year’s Better Hearing & Speech Month theme. PROMOTE Recruit new clients and staff with custom giveaways to promote Audiology and Speech. 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