7 Tips for Hearing Better in 2025
Your world is filled with sounds you don’t want to miss — your grandchild’s piano recital, your favorite sci-fi marathon, or a phone conversation with an old friend. As the new year nears, refresh your connections to the people and moments that matter with these seven simple tips for better hearing.
1. Tap Into Technology
Today’s technology turns any alerting sound into a visual or vibratory cue. Now doorbells, smoke alarms, and more can alert you with flashing lights or vibrations. Smartphones can stream audio directly to your hearing aids, caption videos, or flash visual alerts for incoming calls. Another innovation: We now have hearing aid technology that can translate other languages.
2. Protect Your Hearing
An estimated 1 in 5 youth and adults have hearing loss, and excess noise is one of the most preventable causes. Whether you’re enjoying New Year fireworks, hunting with firearms, riding snowmobiles, or otherwise encountering loud sounds, look out for your hearing health by limiting your exposure and wearing quality hearing protection.
And when seeking out hearing protection, opt for something that matches your activity. Plenty of activities require only over-the-counter earplugs, but others call for that little something extra.
Hunters’ earplugs protect against the loud blasts generated by guns but still allow you to hear what’s going on around you. Musician earplugs perform a similar function, letting you hear what you’re playing but protecting your ears from high decibels.
3. Try Captioned Calls
Trouble hearing phone conversations? You may qualify for a landline phone that shows the spoken words of the person you’re talking to. Through a federally funded program, the telephone is available at no cost if a qualified hearing care professional certifies your hearing loss and need for the phone.
Plus, it works with hearing aids. All you need is a standard phone line and an internet connection. And with the associated app, you can use the service with compatible smartphones and tablets, too!
4. Get Plenty of Exercise
It’s no secret that obesity can put you at risk for strokes, heart disease, diabetes, and other serious health problems. But did you know it’s linked to hearing loss, too? Resolving to get even healthier and more fit in 2025 will help reduce the risk of excess weight, a problem that can tax your hearing and affect total health.
Plus, one study showed that regular exercise delays age-related hearing loss by providing enough blood flow and oxygen to keep your auditory system healthier, longer.
5. Schedule a Hearing Check
You most likely get your teeth and vision checked once a year — what about your hearing? Staying atop your hearing health helps catch any potential changes or problems early, which is important for overall wellness. In fact, more and more studies show that hearing loss affects your overall wellness in a variety of ways.
Take, for example, brain health: Untreated hearing loss has long been linked to cognitive decline and dementia, but hearing care was recently shown to slow down cognitive decline by 48% in older adults already at increased risk for the condition.
As you can see, catching hearing loss as soon as possible benefits more than just your ears!
6. Eat Nutrient-Rich Foods
Did you know that simply making healthier food choices can support your hearing health? Folate and vitamin C, for example, are two nutrients known to potentially aid in the fight against hearing loss.
Folate, also known as vitamin B-9, is important for healthy cell growth and functioning. It’s been shown that folate deficiency may lead to inner-ear dysfunction, resulting in hearing loss — so getting enough is crucial.
But finding folate is simple: Include more dark green leafy vegetables in your diet. If that’s a no-go, reach for legumes, oranges, bananas, broccoli, or asparagus.
Vitamin C, working in concert with magnesium and vitamins A and E, may help thwart noise-induced hearing loss. Blueberries, delicious and versatile, offer up a multitude of nutrients including vitamin C. Some other sources of vitamin C include:
- Brussels sprouts
- Tomatoes
- Kiwi
- Strawberries
- Bell peppers
7. Ditch the Cotton Swabs
With so many people in the habit of cleaning their ears with cotton swabs, it would make sense if you assumed that’s what they’re designed for.
Swabs, however, should never be inserted in the ear.
Sure, you remove the swab from your ear and see plenty of earwax, but there’s usually more not getting removed. In fact, you’re probably pushing that extra earwax deeper into your ear canal. And that can damage your eardrum, leading to hearing loss.
Ears naturally clean themselves — seriously — so if you suspect you have wax buildup, seek help from an audiologist, and always follow their instructions to the letter.
We’re here to help you and your loved ones hear your best! Contact us today for more tips on hearing better in the new year.
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