Around one out of every seven people are estimated to deal with tinnitus. That puts the overall number in the millions. That’s… a lot of people, both in actual terms and relative to the overall population, and in some countries, the amount of the population who experience tinnitus is even more alarming.

True, tinnitus isn’t always recurring. But if you're coping with persistent tinnitus symptoms it becomes crucial to find a solution as soon as you can. Fortunately, there is a remedy that has proven to be quite effective: hearing aids.

Hearing loss and tinnitus are related but distinct conditions. you can have hearing loss without tinnitus or tinnitus without hearing loss. But the two conditions occur together often enough that hearing aids have become a practical solution, managing hearing loss and stopping tinnitus in one fell swoop.

How Hearing Aids Can Help Tinnitus

Hearing aids have, according to one survey, been documented to give relief of tinnitus symptoms for up to 60% of participants. For 22% of those people, the relief was considerable. In spite of this, hearing aids are actually made to treat hearing loss not specifically tinnitus. The benefits appear to come by association. So if you have tinnitus and hearing loss then that's when your hearing aids will most successfully treat the tinnitus symptoms.

Here's how tinnitus symptoms can be decreased with hearing aids:

  • Everything gets slightly louder: When you experience hearing loss, the volume of the outside world (or, at least, certain wavelengths of the world) can fade away and become more silent. When that happens the ringing in your ears becomes a lot more obvious. Hearing loss is not reducing the ringing so it becomes the loudest thing you hear. A hearing aid can boost that surrounding sound, helping to drown out the buzzing or ringing that was so forefront before. As you tune out your tinnitus, it becomes less of a problem.
  • It gets easier to have conversations: Increasing the volume of human speech is something contemporary hearing aids are particularly good at. This means having a conversation can be much easier once you’re regularly wearing your devices. You will be more engaged with your co-worker's story about their kids and better able to participate with your spouse about how their day went. When you have a balanced involved social life tinnitus can appear to fade into the background. Sometimes, tinnitus is intensified by stress so being able to socialize can helps in this way also.
  • The enhanced audio stimulation is keeping your brain fit: Hearing loss has been proven to put a strain on cognitive function. Using a hearing aid can keep the audio centers of your brain limber and healthy, which as a result can help decrease certain tinnitus symptoms you might be experiencing.

Modern Hearing Aids Come With Numerous Advantages

Smart Technology is incorporated into modern hearing aids. To some degree, that’s because they incorporate the latest technologies and hearing assistance algorithms. But it's the ability to customize a hearing aid to the specific user's requirements that makes modern hearing aids so effective (sometimes, they recalibrate according to the level of background noise).

Whatever your particular hearing levels are, personalized hearing aids can conveniently be calibrated to them. The buzzing or humming is more likely to be effectively masked if your hearing aid is dialed in to work best for you.

The Best Way to Get Rid of Tinnitus

This will likely depend on your level of hearing loss. If you haven’t experienced any hearing loss, you’ll still have available treatments for your tinnitus. Medication, cognitive behavioral therapy, or a custom masking device are some possible solutions.

However, hearing aids may be able to take care of both situations if you have tinnitus and hearing loss at the same time. Treating your hearing loss with a good pair of hearing aids can often stop tinnitus from making your life miserable.