Irwin
Well-known Member
- Location
- Denver, Colorado, U.S.A.
A long-awaited Food and Drug Administration proposal would allow millions of consumers to buy over-the-counter hearing aids in stores or online without a prescription or medical exam.
That's some good news. We shouldn't be required to see doctors and audiologists for hearing aids and spend 10s of thousands of dollars. They should have hearing tests in drug stores to see what frequencies need to be boosted and then we can just buy adjustable hearing aids to fix our hearing problems.
Being able to buy OTC hearing aids will greatly drive up competition and drive down prices. It's about time. I'll bet audiologists aren't too happy about it though.
The agency’s move Tuesday to make hearing devices more accessible and affordable for millions of patients with mild to moderate hearing loss is the first step in a process that could make them available to consumers as soon as next fall. The agency’s proposal — coming more than four years after Congress ordered it to craft regulations for over-the-counter devices — would create a new category of hearing aids and supersede state-level regulations that require patients to go through physicians or audiologists to get prescriptions and fittings.
That's some good news. We shouldn't be required to see doctors and audiologists for hearing aids and spend 10s of thousands of dollars. They should have hearing tests in drug stores to see what frequencies need to be boosted and then we can just buy adjustable hearing aids to fix our hearing problems.
Being able to buy OTC hearing aids will greatly drive up competition and drive down prices. It's about time. I'll bet audiologists aren't too happy about it though.