Latest News
dBusinessNews.com - America Hears, Manufacturer and Distributor of Digital Hearing Aids, Finds Success with New Hearing Aid Model Freedom LOF (Liberty Open Fit) Hearing Aid Model Gains Raves CIGNA Invites Runners to Enter Contest for a Free Trip to the 2008 CIGNA

What happens to my body during this time? (60 +)
Health 24 - There are very advanced hearing aids on the market today that can change the life of a woman whose hearing has started to deteriorate. Declining bone mass is a problem widely experienced by older women. After the menopause, a woman’s bones starts

MONEY & POWER
Newsday - When he had an apartment in Boca Raton, Fla., his neighbors quickly learned that he was the “Siemens man.” Nolen recalls, “Many of them had hearing aids that we made and wanted to know where they can get new batteries. I love it.” E-mail Richard

Health Care Products
PR.com - America Hears (www.americahears.com) is a 26-year-old, American-owned-and-operated manufacturer of hearing aids located in Bristol,

The Transistor’s Birthday
Forbes - By 1954 the transistor was in 97% of hearing aids and sales of the devices were up 50%. That year the first transistor radio came out. It cost $49.95, the equivalent of $380 today. Still, as of 1955, a total of just 4 million transistors had been

Patients’ happy challenge: a rising survival rate
Raleigh News & Observer - He got hearing aids this year to compensate for hearing loss likely caused by radiation. And, just recently, the Walders learned that chemotherapy drugs their son received may harm his heart. The American Society of Clinical Oncology recently drafted

Tiny breakthroughs promise big change
Edinburgh News - Bulky and ineffective hearing aids are also set to be a thing of the past with new tiny electronic implants already in development. They are expected to transform the lives of the hard of hearing. There could also be hope for desperate patients

Gloucester Goings On
Gloucester Daily Times - Joseph Sarofeen, hearing aid specialist at Rogers Hearing Solutions, offers hearing tests, family counseling, and cleaning and repairing of hearing aids at no charge. Appointments are required; call the Council on Aging at 978-281-9765. Museum offers

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