BAHA Hearing Aids

Information on Bone-Anchored Hearing Aids

Sharing the Joy of Storytelling with Your Deaf Toddler

Sharing the Joy of Storytelling with Your Deaf Toddler

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Reading stories to young deaf children can be challenging. How do you make your story lively and interesting in sign language? How can you sign so that it is just right for young children who are starting to learn sign language? And how can you sign and hold a book at the same time? In this video, fluent signers tell stories that will help you learn and provide stimulating entertainment for your children. Using a variety of popular children’s books, this video will demonstrate how you can use

buynow big Sharing the Joy of Storytelling with Your Deaf Toddler

List Price: $ 15.95

Price: $ 15.95

One Dozen (12) “I Love You” Rubber Ducky Party Favors

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  • Receive 12 ducks total; mixed set of pink and red.
  • Each measures approx. 2-1/2″W x 2-1/4″H x 2″L
  • Safe for all ages.
  • Make great party favors, or just fun to play with.
  • Shirt reads “I Love You”.

Dressed with pink and red visors and t-shirts reading “I Love You”…. these are just the cutest duckies! You’ll receive 12 ducks, each measures approx. 2-1/2″W x 2-1/4″H x 2″L. They don’t squeak but they do have a tiny hole in the beak so they can squirt water in the tub. Great for decorating, collectibles, or party favors.

buynow big Sharing the Joy of Storytelling with Your Deaf Toddler

Price: $ 8.95

Generation Deaf

We like our music and we like it so loud that everyone else gets to like it with us.
Video Rating: 4 / 5

default Generation Deaf

Work-related hearing loss continues to be a critical workplace safety and health issue. The National Institute for Occupational Safety and Health (NIOSH) and the occupational safety and health community named hearing loss one of the 21 priority areas for research in the 21st century. Noise-induced hearing loss is 100 percent preventable but once acquired, hearing loss is permanent and irreversible. If you must shout to be heard three feet away, you are likely being overexposed to noise. Prevention measures must be taken by employers and workers to ensure the protection of workers’ hearing. Removing hazardous noise from the workplace through engineering controls (eg installing a muffler or building an acoustic barrier) is the most effective way to prevent noise-induced hearing loss. Hearing protectors such as ear plugs and ear muffs should be used when it is not feasible to otherwise reduce noise to a safe level. NIOSH recommends hearing loss prevention programs for all workplaces with hazardous levels of noise. These programs should include noise assessments, engineering controls, audiometric monitoring of workers’ hearing, appropriate use of hearing protectors, worker education, recordkeeping, and program evaluation. For more information, go to the NIOSH Noise and Hearing Loss Prevention website at www.cdc.gov .