Veterans Across America Virtual Chapter Meeting
In the Spring issue of Hearing Life, HLAA board member Larry Guterman’s cover story, Mission Possible: The Sky’s the Limit for Disability Inclusion, details a fascinating zero-gravity flight to test accessibility in space, featuring K. Renee Horton, Ph.D., our HLAA 2023 Convention keynote speaker. We profile audiologist Janice Trent, who provides accessible hearing care to underserved communities of color outside the nation’s capital. Two long-time HLAA members share how cochlear implants changed their lives. Find out how the Walk4Hearing community brought together a young girl with hearing loss and her deaf rescue dog. Join us in the Big Easy this June at the Convention to enjoy a variety of educational, research and social activities, and explore New Orleans. Plus, the latest news on HLAA programs, chapters and advocacy, book reviews and more.
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All the World’s a Stage.
On December 15, 2022, 14 disability ambassadors, including NASA’s Dr. K. Renee Horton—the keynote speaker for HLAA’s upcoming Convention—boarded a zero-gravity flight to test accessibility in space.
HLAA Fights for the Next Step in Communications Accessibility.
Ensuring Communication Access in Health Care for Patients with Hearing Loss.
Dr. Trent’s practice is in an area that she calls “a melting pot of people from all over the world,” in the shadow of the nation’s capital. She wanted to provide accessible hearing care to all, but particularly to underserved communities of color.
Chapter Improves Accessibility in New York City.
Cochlear Implants Changing Lives
In honor of International CI Day on February 25, we asked Lisa Yuan and Malik B. El-Amin, two long-time Hearing Loss Association of America (HLAA) members and cochlear implant (CI) users, to share their personal stories with us.
A 12-year-old former Walk4Hearing ambassador has a lot in common with a fluffy rescue dog who needed a home. Learn how the Walk4Hearing community of support brought them together.
Together, We’re Bringing Hope to Hearing Loss.
Coming to Our Senses: A Boy Who Learned to See, a Girl Who Learned to Hear, and How We All Discover the World.
How to Communicate: Poems
Come join us at the HLAA 2023 Convention in New Orleans this June! You’ll enjoy three action-packed days filled with educational workshops, demonstrations, the Exhibit Hall, Welcome Back Bash, and the Research Symposium. It’s the largest event of its kind designed to empower people with hearing loss.
Take a look a the city of New Orleans, beyond the excitement of the popular festival. HLAA’s meeting planner shows us her favorite things to do in the Big Easy, all in proximity to our Convention hotel.
Explore the exciting potential of Auracast for public listening, get workplace and air travel tips and see how HLAA empowers people in our nationwide community.
Read about a local HLAA Chapter's collaboration with a popular hearing loss exhibit in Boston, get back-to-school tips for parents of kids with hearing loss, see HLAA 2025 Convention highlights and learn why it's never too late for better hearing.
In this issue, we address the wide-ranging effects of hearing loss beyond your ears, from communication to confidence to connection, plus patient advocacy, disaster preparedness and public policy.
Our Fall/Winter Hearing Life magazine focuses on building and growing a hearing loss community. Read about a unique Girl Scout troop, the importance of connection for mental health, contributions from our nationwide network and more.
“Parenting with Hearing Loss” features one mother's journey with single-sided hearing loss, another mom's quest to support her son and advice from parents in HLAA's nationwide community.
This issue's technology theme provides a deep take on the latest hearing tech innovations, in areas such as artificial intelligence (AI), Bluetooth, sound processing, automatic speech recognition (ASR), augmented reality (AR) and more.
Built around the theme of inclusion in hearing health, our fall issue highlights a range of challenges and solutions for providing services to patients in multicultural communities, overcoming language barriers, urban outreach innovations and more.
With its focus on "Back to School with Hearing Loss," this issue features strategies on supporting children and teens with hearing loss, including stories from parents and students and expert advice from a psychologist and single mom.
When 16-year-old Sophie Shapiro received advice from her new friends at HLAA about giving her hearing aids a chance, she found out what she’d been missing. Today, she serves as a hearing activist and advocate with a special focus on youth.