Posted by Robin Graham on 06/07/2023 23:50:06:
Thanks to all for all responses. To flesh out my original post a bit my last NHS review was in 2021, back in the days of facemasks and general reluctance to stress the NHS. I saw a Scrivens 'audiologist' (outsourced) and to be brutally honest he seemed a bit dim. He equipped me new aids (the new thin tube/dome things) but was unable to explain why these might be preferable (or even equivalent) to the wide tube/earmould system I'd been using. They seemed OK at the time (Ie in the room with him), but were subjectively much worse than the old ones in real life. When I went back for a follow-up consultation he said that maybe I needed different hearing aids, but as they could only supply once per three years I'd have to wait or go back to my GP for a referral and start from square one. Gosh! so I went back to my previous ones, all well until on a routine clean when I mistook the acetone bottle for iso-propanol. One melted. Still nine months until I can go back to the NHS, hence the exploration of private provision. In the meantime, I seem to have lost the Scrivens aids. To be brutally honest I can be a bit dim.
Anyhow, your replies have been very helpful. I can pay (~£250) for replacement NHS aids which will likely be as good as the private offerings.
Robin.
I am not sure what the current situation is but the system as advised in our (former) clinic was:-
Replacement of lost or damaged NHS hearing aids £100 each.
Might just be worth checking out if it’s possible to apply that your original (melted) hearing aid as a temporary solution.
Edited By V8Eng on 07/07/2023 09:11:54
Edited By V8Eng on 07/07/2023 09:12:49