Ida Institute Joins Demant
The Ida Institute, a non-profit organization focused on person-centered hearing rehabilitation care, joined hearing healthcare group Demant.
The Ida Institute, a non-profit organization focused on person-centered hearing rehabilitation care, joined hearing healthcare group Demant.
With the partnership, CHHA also becomes the 32nd member of the Person-centered Hearing Network. The global network is comprised of hearing care professionals and representative from professional organizations, patient organizations, and academia. The PCHN collaborates to implement person-centered care and to give people the knowledge, skills, and confidence to better manage hearing loss.
The Ida Institute announced that it's kicking off January with a 50% offer on all course badges. The badges are awarded to professionals who complete the Ida Institute’s CEU/CPD-accredited Learning Hall courses in personalized hearing care.
The Ida Institute will be working with the Copenhagen Institute for Future Studies (CIFS), among others, to investigate current megatrends at a societal level and then examine how those affect healthcare and audiology specifically.
Read MoreThe course provides an overall introduction to PCC, looks at the different elements and key benefits, and dives into the aspects that are particularly relevant to support staff.
Read MoreThe Ida Institute announced a new collaboration between the Ida Institute, Healthy Hearing, and Hearing Directory, which will allow people with hearing loss across the US and Canada to identify hearing care professionals and clinics that have earned the Inspired by Ida label, “a benchmark of quality that signals dedication to person-centered care.”
Read MoreToo many hearing care professionals have a resistant or ambivalent outlook about the use of motivational engagement tools which seek to change patients’ attitudes about their hearing loss. As the fiddler Tevye can tell you, change can be good—and even necessary—for all parties involved.
Read MoreThe Ida Institute announced the appointment of Barbara Kelley, Executive Director of the Hearing...
Read MoreThe Ida Institute is now accepting proposals for the 2020 Ida Research Grants. Established in...
Read MoreBased on three simple terms—volume, clarity, and brain energy—the tool is a conversation guide that uses a playful visual with familiar icons to illustrate how hearing loss affects a person. The tool allows the professional to note what the patient hears, what they struggle with, and their most important communication situations.
Read MoreMembers of the Inspired by Ida program can be featured in the newly launched FindHearing.com searchable online directory of independent clinics that allows consumers to find professional care in their area.
Read MoreThe meeting will bring together representatives of patient organizations, educational institutions, professional organizations, and care providers from around the world to exchange knowledge and ideas and discuss concrete collaboration opportunities.
Read MoreThe partnership is said to be part of Ida’s larger effort to engage with organizations around the world to strengthen and promote a culture of person-centered care (PCC) in audiology by teaming up with professional organizations, patient associations, and universities around the world.
Read MoreThe partnership is said to be part of Ida’s larger effort to engage with organizations around the world to strengthen and promote a culture of person-centered care (PCC) in audiology by teaming up with professional organizations, patient associations, and universities around the world.
Read MoreThe renamed tool is an update of the Ida Institute’s popular ‘Transitions Management’ tool that focuses on significant times of change in the life of a child with hearing loss.
Read MoreIn the book, Eberts shares her personal hearing loss journey, examines her experiences with audiologists over the years, and lays out her formula for person-centered care from the patient’s point of view.
Read MorePatients will often remember and appreciate your “bedside manner”– or the way you relate to them in a personal and caring way–over your knowledge, skill, education, and professionalism. Using an improvisational approach to the patient interview may, at times, be cumbersome. However, it is also likely to make your approach to their hearing-related problems more interesting, genuine, and meaningful—for both the patient and you.
Read MoreAdam & Jerusha Shulberg are the owners of Cubex Audiology Ltd in London, a private practice that was originally founded by Adam’s father in 1964.
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