The Latest "Buzz" about Cell Phones and Hearing Aids
Linda Kozma-Spytek
- The Latest “Buzz “ about Cell Phones  and Hearing Aids	
 - Wireless Telephone Use 
 - Hearing aid candidates and wearers need to be…
 - How Wireless  Telephones Work
 - How Wireless Telephones Work
 -    When a wireless phone is in communication with its network, an electromagnetic (EM) field is present around the phone’s antenna.  This  field pulses during communication  over a digital wireless phone.  It  is this pulsing energy that may  be picked up by the hearing aid’s microphone or telecoil circuitry  and heard as a “buzz.”
 - NO TITLE
 - NO TITLE
 - What decisions  will I need to make?
 - Which cellular service provider should I use?* 
 - NO TITLE
 - NO TITLE
 - NO TITLE
 - Cellular Service Providers
 - Questions to Ask about the Terms of Agreement
 - Which wireless telephone should I select?*
 - NO TITLE
 - Digital Wireless Telephones
 -   Analog   vs   Digital  (www.fcc.gov/cib/cell_phones.html)
 - NO TITLE
 - If I experience interference, what should I do?*
 - NO TITLE
 - NO TITLE
 - NO TITLE
 - NO TITLE
 - NO TITLE
 - Without a Hearing Aid
 - How do I   select an accessory?
 - NO TITLE
 - Consumer Feedback
 - Consumer Feedback
 - NO TITLE
 - Consumer Feedback
 - NO TITLE
 - NO TITLE
 - Consumer Feedback
 - NO TITLE
 - ANSI C63.19
 - ANSI C63.19
 - HAC/VC*  and  Wireless Phones
 - NO TITLE
 - NO TITLE
 - NO TITLE
 - Ring Signaling
 - What if I’m buying a new hearing aid?
 - NO TITLE
 - NO TITLE
 - Matching Digital Wireless  Telephones to Hearing Aids
 - NO TITLE
 - NO TITLE
 - NO TITLE
 - Sources for Attachments
 
Return to Format Selection
This document created with the Web Accessibility Wizard for Microsoft(R) Office.