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          Agra, Aug 24 (IANS) A retired army doctor says he has perfected   a simple and affordable technique to allow the hearing impaired to   hear."I have developed a simple yet innovative approach in a family   practice for age-related hearing loss (presbycusis), without the need for any   hearing aid or surgical intervention," Lt. Col. (retd.) Rajesh Chauhan told   IANS.
 
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        "After treating dozens of senior citizens, I am reasonably sure that we might be   on the brink of a major breakthrough. I have found an innovative, cheap,   comfortable, reliable and permanent solution to restore hearing to those   affected by presbycusis."
 "This technique might also be useful for   patients who have a noise-induced hearing loss and for those suffering from   otosclerosis, which also results in poor hearing and gradual hearing loss,"   Chauhan added.
 
 "This new technique that we accidentally developed   requires refinement and research. It will help in managing age-related hearing   loss without surgery, hearing aids or injections. It does not require surgery   and hearing improves noticeably immediately after the first sitting," Chauhan   explained.
 
 Two of his patients who had been using hearing aids have   stopped using them.
 
 Chauhan is cagey about divulging details about his   technique. He first wants to patent it.
 
 "It is a combination of many   techniques, and they all work in tandem. It needs just two or three sittings to   bring about the desired changes," Chauhan said.
 
 According to Chauhan, the   younger generation and the aged are more prone to deafness from increasing noise   pollution, use of gadgets, mobile phones and loud music.
 
 Experts and data   available from various sources, including the Indian Council of Medical Research   (ICMR), make it clear that hearing impairment is on the rise in India, and one   out of every 12 people is a victim.
 
 Chauhan said the most common cause of   loss of hearing is a perforated ear drum, a thin membrane that separates the ear   canal and the middle ear. Another major cause is presbycusis, hearing loss due   to ageing.
 
 Nearly 6.3 percent of the Indian population suffers from   progressive and acute hearing loss.
 
 A year-long pilot phase of the   programme by the Rehabilitation Council of India was to be kicked off in 25   districts across 12 states in 2007.
 
 The programme aimed to train over   100,000 healthcare professionals from the district to the grassroot level about   prevention, promotion, early identification and rehabilitation of all types of   ear diseases.
 
 But the progress of the programme has been tardy, with no   discernible results to cheer for.
 
 Chauhan explained: "As we grow old,   some of us might develop hearing loss. Most of the old people affected tend to   ignore this problem. Hearing loss is troublesome and difficult to   manage."
 
 He added: "Some people try to overcome their hearing loss by   using sign language, lip reading or by using a hearing aid. In certain cases,   surgery and cochlear implant may help, but these are costly   procedures."
 
 "A lot of my energy goes in communicating with my   mother-in-law, who is hard of hearing. When I talk to her, the neighbourhood   thinks I am waging a verbal war. I wish there was a cure for this problem, other   than the expensive hearing aid. We bought a cheap gadget, but that amplifies   sound a thousand times and creates more problems," said Padmini, a   homemaker.
 
 Chauhan has a quick-fix solution for such people.
 
    
	
	
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