- 1). Don't do anything that will disturb your ears alone prior to having a hearing test, including using cotton swabs or any other item to clean out your ears before your hearing test. Probing in your ears can push earwax deeper and cause bleeding or irritation. During the exam, the clinician will check your ears, and if your ears need cleaning she will tell you.
- 2). Take out any earrings and take off glasses before the clinician hooks you up to the testing equipment. Even if the clinician says it's not necessary, insist that you'll be more comfortable with those items off.
- 3). Clear your mind and use the bathroom before the hearing test begins. If you're distracted, you're more likely to miss very faint test tones. Don't feel rushed or in a hurry; if you're pressed for time, reschedule your test. Once you're in the test area, take deep breaths while the clinician sets up his equipment.
- 4). Ask the clinician to repeat any testing instructions you're unsure about. If the clinician starts the test without giving you any instructions, stop her. Since you want to be sure you understand exactly what's happening and what you need to do, ask for an explanation.
- 5). Stop the clinician if the ear pieces, headphones, or environment are intolerable. Ear inserts used for hearing tests will be noticeable, but shouldn't hurt your ears. Headphones shouldn't be so tight that they're pinching your head. Don't proceed with the test if the equipment placement isn't comfortable from the start.
- 6). Respond even if you're unsure whether you heard a sound or not. The purpose of a hearing test is to find the softest volume level you can hear tones at. The clinician will start each tone at a loud volume and take it down to a very faint volume to determine at what level you no longer can hear and at what level you begin to hear. So whether the tone sounds clear, faint, or far-off, respond.
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