Archives for September 2020

National Microtia Awareness Day is on November 9th!

National Microtia Awareness Day is on November 9th!

National Microtia Awareness Day started in 2016 and was established by our Ear Community Organization! The purpose of National Microtia Awareness Day is to help promote public awareness of Microtia & Atresia. Our hope is that families who have new babies born with Microtia & Atresia will leave the hospital armed with more answers than questions, and their dreams for their children intact. If more people learn about Microtia & Atresia, they will be kinder and more accepting. It is also our goal for children and adults with Microtia to realize that they are not alone and that little and missing ears can never hold you back. Through this national day, families can find out about organizations and resources for information and support. 💙👂💙

The Microtia & Atresia community has always wanted to come together and know that no one is alone with Microtia and Aural Atresia. The Ear Community Organization has created a home for Microtia and Atresia individuals and their families through our online support groups and our national awareness day. Over the years, National Microtia Awareness Day has been embraced and recognized by families and medical professionals all over the world! Click here to learn more about National Microtia Awareness Day.

For 2020, we will be offering (3) different stores to purchase official NMAD merchandise from. A portion of the proceeds from all of these items goes directly to the Ear Community Organization for us to benefit the Microtia & Atresia community. This year, we have fun prints on shirts, socks, masks, gaiters, phone covers, backpacks, pillows, pins, stickers and more.

Please note the different order deadlines for each online store:

Order by October 3rd
This store offers International shipping! This store has awareness day shirts by Ear Community!

Order by October 6th
This store offers International shipping! This store has masks, socks, backpacks, mugs, gaiters, pillows, sheets, accessories and more!

Order by October 12th
This store only ships in the United States! This store has Ear Community’s traditional 2020

https://stores.inksoft.com/earcommunity/shop/store

All three online stores will also be listed on Ear Community’s

home page at: www.EarCommunity.org

A special “thank you” to Dr. Leslie Gonsette for creating the designs on our Ear Community store awareness t-shirts! Dr. Gonsette is a mother to a child born with Microtia & Atresia and she is also a board certified pediatrician and an Ear Community Board Member. A special “thank you” to artist and advocate Priscila Soares for designing our fun designs through the My Lucky Ears Store for Microtia. Both Priscila and her son have hearing loss. She wears a BAHS and her son wears a cochlear implant. Priscila also created a piece of art honoring our National Microtia Awareness Day three years ago in the image of Ally Tumblin of Ear Community. Today, this piece of art hangs in the front lobby of the US headquarters for Oticon Medical. A special “thank you” to Sloan Coleman TinyLittleMonster for helping us again with this year’s design for our traditional National Microtia Awareness Day t-shirts!

Thank you to everyone for embracing our special day on November 9th and for embracing our Microtia & Atresia Community through the Ear Community Organization!

Ear Community 💙👂💙

Capito’s bipartisan companion bill requires private insurance coverage of hearing aids

Senator Shelley Moore Capito (R-W.Va)

 

U.S. Sen. Shelley Moore Capito (R-WV) on Sept. 8 proposed bipartisan legislation that would require private insurance companies to provide coverage for hearing aids.

“Many of us take for granted the gift of hearing and how often we rely on our senses to effectively communicate with one another,” Sen. Capito said. “It is important that we take the necessary steps to improve our health insurance systems and ensure these critical devices are readily available for those who need them.”

Sen. Capito sponsored Ally’s Act, S. 4532, with cosponsor U.S. Sen. Elizabeth Warren (D-MA) to ensure private insurance companies specifically cover osseointegrated hearing devices (OIDs), including bone-anchored hearing aids (BAHA) and cochlear implants, according to a bill summary provided by Sen. Capito’s staff.

“OIDs are even more crucial for individuals born with hearing deficiencies, as the first five years of life are important for speech and language development,” said Sen. Capito. “I’m proud to introduce Ally’s Act, which will help establish better access to these critical hearing devices for those that need them.”

S. 4532 is the companion bill to the same-named H.R. 5485, introduced in December 2019 by bill sponsor U.S. Rep. Joe Neguse (D-CO), who named the measure in honor of Colorado-native Ally Tumblin, 10, who was born without a right ear or hearing canal and required the use of a BAHA. Following an insurance denial for Ally’s hearing device, she and her mother formed the Ear Community organization to help advocate for insurance coverage of these hearing devices.

Along with Ear Community, according to a one-page background document on the bill, numerous supporters also have endorsed the measure, including the American Cochlear Implant Alliance, the American Academy of Audiology, the American Speech-Language-Hearing Association, and the American Society of Pediatric Otolaryngology, among many others.

Link to article.

Warren, Capito Introduce Ally’s Act

September 09, 2020

Warren, Capito Introduce Ally’s Act

Legislation would require insurance providers to cover critical and life-altering hearing aid devices

Bill Text (PDF) | One-Pager (PDF)

Washington, D.C. – United States Senators Elizabeth Warren (D-Mass.) and Shelley Moore Capito (R-W.Va.) introduced Ally’s Act, bipartisan legislation that would ensure private insurance companies provide coverage for osseointegrated hearing device (OIDs), including bone anchored hearing aids (BAHA) and cochlear implants. OIDs are a type of hearing aid that benefit a wider range of people with hearing loss and are often the only hearing device that can restore hearing for individuals born with hearing loss.

“Far too many Americans are left behind due to hearing loss and cannot access the devices they need because their insurance will not cover it, leaving many adults and children in the U.S. without a solution to restore their hearing,” Senator Warren said. “Our bipartisan bill is a simple fix that increases access to these specialized hearing devices and gives Americans across the country a chance to be a part of every conversation.”

“Many of us take for granted the gift of hearing and how often we rely on our senses to effectively communicate with one another. It is important that we take the necessary steps to improve our health insurance systems and ensure these critical devices are readily available for those who need them. OIDs are even more crucial for individuals born with hearing deficiencies, as the first five years of life are important for speech and language development. I’m proud to introduce Ally’s Act, which will help establish better access to these critical hearing devices for those that need them,” said Senator Capito.

The legislation is named after ten-year old Colorado-native, Ally Tumblin, who was born without a right ear or hearing canal and therefore requires the use of a bone-anchored hearing aid. Following a denial for her hearing device, Ally and her mother formed the organization, “Ear Community” to help advocate for insurance coverage of these hearing devices to ensure no person is left unable to hear because of private insurance companies’ refusal to cover OIDs.

A companion bill was introduced in the U.S. House of Representatives by Congressmen Joe Neguse (D-Colo.), David B. McKinley, P.E. (R-W.Va.), and Mike Thompson (D-Calif.).

Senator Warren believes that all Americans should have access to health care, including hearing technology.

  • In July 2019, Senators Warren and Rand Paul (R-Ky.) announced the reintroduction of the Medicare Audiologist Access and Services Act, which was originally introduced in 2018 and would ensure seniors and people with disabilities on Medicare have access to a full range of hearing and balance health care services provided by licensed audiologists. In May 2020, Senator Warren and Rep. Tom Rice (R-S.C.) led a letter, along with Congressman Matt Cartwright (D-Pa.), Senator Paul, Senator Kyrsten Sinema (D-Ariz.), Congressman Darren Soto (D-Fla.), Congressman Gus Bilirakis (R-Fla.), and Congressman Rodney Davis (R-Ill.), to House and Senate leadership urging them to include provisions of the Medicare Audiologist Access and Services Act in upcoming COVID-19 packages.
  • In December 2016, Senators Warren and Chuck Grassley (R-Iowa), introduced the Over-the-Counter Hearing Aid Act, which they later reintroduced with Senators Maggie Hassan (D-N.H.) and Johnny Isakson (R-Ga.) in March 2017. The bipartisan bill passed in August 2017 and requires the Food and Drug Administration (FDA) to permit the sale of traditional hearing aids over the counter.
  • She has also partnered with Senator Grassley to encourage the FDA to improve consumer access to hearing aids, and she and Senator Paul have called on Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services Administrator Seema Verma to remove roadblocks that prevent Medicare beneficiaries with hearing loss from accessing audiology services.
    Link to Press Release.
    Additional links.

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