Fun With Audiology: Making Ear Molds

Did you know that ears are one of the few body parts that never stop
growing? I think noses might be the other. Besides hair and
fingernails, obviously.

When you wear behind-the-ear hearing aids, the hearing aids last for
years, but the ear molds—the little custom-made silicone or acrylic
doohickeys that fits into your ear—need replacing every so often. As
your ear grows, the ear mold ceases to fit, and first you get a
feedback problem, and then eventually the mold just won’t stay in the
ear at all.

So you go to the audiologist’s office, and she makes new impressions
of your ears with a quick-hardening goo. You ship the impressions off
to a lab, and in a couple of weeks you’ll have your brand new ear molds.

If you are three years old, you may find this process somewhat
entertaining, if mildly uncomfortable. If you are six years old and the
uncomfortable part is happening to your brother, not to you, you will
consider it a ripping good time. Beanie pronounced it "huge fun."

I get a large number of hits every day from hearing-aid-related
searches, including variations of "toddler ear molds," so I thought it
might be helpful if I posted a walk-through of the process. Besides,
pictures are always fun.

First the audiologist checks your ears, making sure there isn’t too
much wax in there—that might mess up the shape of the impression. Then
she carefully inserts a little foam stopper to make sure none of the
impression goo goes too far up the ear canal.

Then she pops the two kinds of goo out of their little bubble
wrappers, and she mixes them together into a pliable substance that can
be squeezed out of a syringe but will harden within a few minutes.
Beanie, supervising, thought this mixing process looked pretty nifty
and is now wondering how to work "become an audiologist" into her plan
to be a scuba-diver with ten children.

The audiologist scoops the goo into the syringe and carefully
squeezes it into the ear, sort of like making an icing rose on a
birthday cake. Now you have to sit and wait. You can’t poke at the goo,
much as you might wish to. Nor can you pull on the string that is
connected to the little foam stopper inside your ear canal. Patience,
grasshopper.

Meanwhile, the audiologist squirts the leftover goo out of the syringe. This, I am told, is THE BEST PART.

Let’s do the other ear while we’re waiting. It’s okay to drool.

Finished! Time to pull out the impression. No need to be suspicious; it won’t bite.

The impressions go into a box and are dispatched to the Lab, that mysterious place where ear molds are born.

Now comes the fun part! (The other fun part, says Beanie.)
What color ear molds do you want? The sky’s the limit. No, Bean, your
brother isn’t getting the sparkles.

What color did he get? You’ll have to wait two weeks to find out.

10 thoughts on “Fun With Audiology: Making Ear Molds”

  1. You may think I’m kidding, but I can’t wait! 🙂 My dd’s look like the one in the top right corner, but more of a light transparent pinkish shade *with sparkles.* Yes, envy us. LOL! Makes up for the boring coffee brown aid. 🙂

  2. Oh, Melissa…I love the part about Beanie’s plans. Sounds a lot like my almost-six-year-old’s plan to “become a surgeon and then, while taking a break from the hospital, become a famous singer on CDs, then a veterinarian”. A great age (aren’t they all in their own ways?).

  3. He is sitting there so sweetly! What a neat process. Tell Beanie that there are lots of other jobs that take neat molds too – dental or orthondontic assistant!

  4. Awww . . . my little girl needed ear tubes at age 2 — now that was an adventure! Poor fella. At least these molds come in cool colors!

  5. I love cute kid shots! This post is a real service. Annika was terrified when she had to get ear molds made to get the special swim ear plugs to protect the tubes in her ears. Seeing the whole story in photos is a great way for kids to understand what’s going on. Maybe you can link this post on your sidebar?

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