Essay On Cochlear Implants

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There are lots of deaf people throughout the world. For some, being deaf is a way of life and have adapted to it. But for others, being deaf is just not cutting it for them. When the cells in the ear get damaged or even die off, a person’s hearing becomes impaired. The cochlear implant, invented in 1961 by Dr. William F. House, enables people to enhance their missing sense. The cochlear implant enables the profoundly deaf and hard-of-hearing to reclaim their sense of sound by surgically placing a portion under the skin along with the other portion sitting behind the ear and can either benefit the individual or offend the Deaf culture. A cochlear implant will give a person their sense of hearing back but it will not restore normal hearing. Instead, the implant will allow profoundly deaf and hard-of-hearing people the ability to listen to useful representations of sounds in their surroundings. With the ability to listen to the sounds that goes around the person, the person will have a better understanding of their environment and will even get to listen to other people’s voices. Being hard-of-hearing or even deaf may leave you pretty lonely. The only thing you can hear is the voice in your head, but in some cases, it’s not even your own voice. Deaf and hard-of-hearing people cannot even hear their …show more content…

That’s why they would want to get the implant; to be able to hear again. But in some cases, others would want to hear for the first time. Some deaf people are born into deaf families and would live a deaf lifestyle. In that case, the person may feel curious or even meet someone that may persuade them into getting a cochlear implant as seen on Switched at Birth. For other people, a cochlear implant would be the last thing on their mind. Being an individual living a deaf lifestyle would feel normal to them. Being a part of a deaf community would be horrific if the person got a cochlear implant because everything would change from that point

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