American Sign Language Meets Slam Poetry in a New Film Entitled "Deaf Jam"

Award winning film maker, Judy Lieff, brings us the story of Aneta Brodski who is an Israeli teenager living in Queens, New York.  Aneta is also deaf.  The story chronicles Aneta’s desire to connect with the world and how she accomplishes her dreams of self-expression by putting her words and signs into performing a very raw form of poetry.  See how she collaborates with hearing and non-hearing alike to give the world some perspective on what it means to be Aneta.

Link: http://www.pbs.org/independentlens/deaf-jam/film.html

University of Guam Conducts Remote Hearing Test With Colorado Doctor

Venerannda Leon Guerrero held her slumbering infant in her arms in a
Center for Excellence in Developmental Disabilities Education, Research
and Service (CEDDERS) testing center at the University of Guam as she
watched an audiologist in Colorado conduct a diagnostic test to
determine whether or not her baby has a hearing loss.

The remote test was held in October and marked the first
technology-enabled distance diagnostic testing for hearing loss on very
young infants in Guam.
This event was made possible through the Tele-audiology Project.

Link: http://www.pacificnewscenter.com/index.php?option=com_content&view=article&id=18268:uog-conducts-remote-hearing-test-with-colorado-doctor&catid=45:guam-news&Itemid=156

Most Parents Favor Cytomagalovirus (CMV) Screening for Newborns

About 85% of parents would prefer to have their newborn tested for
congenital cytomegalovirus (CMV), even if testing was not routine, and
even if their child turned out to be CMV-positive but never developed
problems, according to a new study published online November 14 in Pediatrics. The authors note that about 30,000 infants are born each year in the
United States with congenital CMV infection, and approximately 1 in 5
develop disabilities, most often sensorineural hearing loss and/or
mental retardation.
http://www.medscape.com/viewarticle/753523

Link: http://www.medscape.com/viewarticle/753523

The Center of Childhood Deafness at Boys Town Releases New Quarterly E Newsletter

Boys Town National Research Hospital’s Center for Childhood
Deafness recently released its quarterly e-newsletter containing links for
professionals who serve children with hearing loss and for families who may
benefit from accessing their programs and care. Their mission is to reach
children and families across the country. Take a look at the various distance
education courses that address the needs of educators and parents who wish to
access the most up-to-date evidence-based approaches in education and development.

http://www.boystownhospital.org/htmlemail/Pages/CCD1.aspx

Link: http://www.boystownhospital.org/htmlemail/Pages/CCD1.aspx

November 2011: Probes and Tips

The November 2011 edition of the ECHO Initiative’s Probes and Tips newsletter is
now available and features some new features on how to “Spread the Word” and help draw positive and appropriate attention to the important services that you are providing to children, while simultaneously informing others about best practices in early childhood hearing screening.

Link: http://archive.constantcontact.com/fs073/1102782899287/archive/1108442926094.html

NowiHear.com Launches Campaign as Antidote to UnitedHealth Group Internet Hearing Aid Sales Initiative

As the audiology industry reacts to the news that Minnetonka-based
health insurer UnitedHealth Group is making discounted hearing aids
available for only $749-$949 per ear to both their customers and
non-customers, NowiHear.com,
a wholly owned consumer marketing division of AuDNet, Inc. wants consumers to understand the potential dangers of this
initiative and is offering an alternative.

NowiHear.com
is not alone in their concern about UnitedHealth Group’s decision, and
joins the Minnesota
Department of Health and professional industry organizations that
have taken specific actions regarding this news such as the American
Academy of Audiology, Academy of Doctors of Audiology, and American
Speech, Language, and Hearing Association.

Link: http://www.marketwatch.com/story/nowihearcom-launches-campaign-as-antidote-to-unitedhealth-group-internet-hearing-aid-sales-initiative-2011-11-04

October and November EHDI Email Express is now available!

October/November Issue of AAP’s EHDI E-Mail Express is now
available and includes some great information on subjects such as:

     -Mild hearing
loss linked to brain atrophy in older adults; early intervention could prevent
slide toward speech comprehension difficulties
     -a new
Tele-intervention Resource Guide
     -a brief overview
of the National Association for the Deaf
     -Reducing loss to
follow-up

and more!!  Check it
out to find current news and information from the American Academy of
Pediatrics!

Link: http://www.infanthearing.org/ncham_news/docs/EHDI_Email_Express_OctNov2011.pdf

HRSA Announces New MCHB Director

The U.S. Health Resources and Services Administration (HRSA)
announced today that they have selected Dr. Michael Lu as the new Associate
Administrator for Maternal and Child Health (MCH Bureau Director). Dr. Lu’s
starting date at MCHB is still being determined, but we would like to
congratulate Dr. Lu on being selected to this new and important position.

Picture of Dr. Lu (taken from UCLA website)

Link:

National Institute on Deafness and Other Communication Disorders Draft Strategic Plan

Submission Deadline: November 23, 2011

The National
Institute on Deafness and Other Communication Disorders (NIDCD) seeks
public comments on its draft strategic plan for 2012-2016. The NIDCD
supports and conducts research and research
training in the areas of hearing and balance; smell and taste; and
voice, speech, and language. The Strategic Plan serves as a guide to the
NIDCD in prioritizing its research investment, illustrates the current
state-of-the-science, and highlights recent advances
in the communication sciences. The draft Plan presents a series of
goals and objectives that represent the most promising research needs
within the NIDCD’s mission areas.

Link: http://www.nidcd.nih.gov/about/plans/strategic/pages/publiccomments.aspx

Making sense of sound

Imagine a baby who doesn’t startle at a sudden noise. Tests show hearing loss. If
the type of hearing loss is something called sensorineural, then sound
comes into the baby’s ear, but the information never reaches the brain.
The problem is often damage to hair cells in the inner ear, called the
cochlea. The cells cannot convert the energy created by sound vibrations
into a nerve impulse that would travel via the auditory nerve to the
brain.
A century ago — even 30 years ago — treatments or hearing aids
to help with sensorineural hearing loss were primitive or non-existent,
depending on the extent of damage. The child likely would have had to
go to a special school or to have special education to learn another way
to communicate, such as sign language. The child would have lived in a world of virtual silence.
In this article journalist Susan Pugh highlights some of the current available procedures and research underway to help battle hearing loss.

Link: http://www2.newsadvance.com/lifestyles/2011/oct/27/making-sense-sound-ar-1409696/