More than two million people in the United States are severely or profoundly deaf, having 90 percent hearing loss in both ears. Some are pre-lingually deaf, having had no hearing from birth or losing their hearing before developing speech and language; others have had their hearing deteriorate over years until everything sounds garbled. The condition affects nearly every aspect of life and has an enormous impact on families. Conventional hearing aids that amplify and deliver sounds to the ear do not improve this type of deafness.

The majority of those with severe to profound deafness have a degeneration or malfunction of thousands of delicate hair cells in the cochlea (inner ear) due to illness, injury or hereditary factors. Damaged or malfunctioning sensory cells prevent electrical impulses from reaching the hearing nerve and sending them along to the brain where they are interpreted as sound. University Hospitals and UH Rainbow Babies & Children's Hospital is now a center for bilateral cochlear implantation.
UH Rainbow Babies & Children's Hospital, consistently ranked the best children's hospital in the Midwest, has an extensive pediatric cochlear implant program where parents can be sure that their child is receiving the best possible care and the most advanced treatment. The pediatric program includes:
- Comprehensive evaluation
- Comprehensive training prior to implanting
- Consultation/choice of cochlear implant
- Individual aural habilitation
- Educational and family support services
- Surgical collaboration with neurotologic and pediatric otolaryngologic support
A Team Approach To Care
The University Hospitals and Rainbow Babies & Children’s Hospital cochlear implant team has extensive experience in routine as well as difficult cases in both pediatric and adult patients. Team members include:
- A neurotologist, who specializes in the treatment of ear disease and surgery as well as nerve and brain related problems of the ear, leads the cochlear implant team
- Surgeons who are fellowship trained in otology and neurotologic surgery
- Audiologists who perform pre-operative hearing evaluations
- Cochlear Implant audiology specialist who programs the external speech processor to the patient’s diagnosis and measures and reprograms it to physiological changes over time
- Speech-language pathologists, social workers, education consultants and psychologists are available as needed