Hearing Aid Stocks List

Related ETFs - A few ETFs which own one or more of the above listed Hearing Aid stocks.

Hearing Aid Stocks Recent News

Date Stock Title
Jul 6 COST 4 Reasons Costco Will Never Raise Membership Prices by More Than $20 a Year
Jul 6 COST This One Item Helps Costco Earn Billions of Dollars per Year -- It's Not Rotisserie Chicken
Jul 5 COST Stocks are at record highs. Investors keep playing the hits.
Jul 5 COST How investors could reposition portfolios for Q2 earnings
Jul 5 COST You Might Want to Upgrade to the Costco Executive Membership. Here's Why
Jul 5 COST Gen Z Discovers Costco, Sam’s Club and the Joy of Buying Groceries in Bulk
Jul 5 COST The Zacks Analyst Blog Highlights Costco, Dollar Target and Ross Stores
Jul 4 COST You're Guaranteed Not to Lose a Dime on a Costco Executive Membership Upgrade. Here's Why
Jul 4 COST Costco: What Does A Future Without Multiple Expansion Look Like?
Jul 4 DOV Dover: Excellent Economics Well Captured At Current Multiples
Jul 4 COST Need a New Car? You Can Save $1,000 on These 5 Models by Going Through Costco
Jul 4 COST Costco Stock Trounced the S&P 500 in the First Half of 2024, but Can It Keep the Momentum Up for the Next 6 Months?
Jul 4 COST New Costco Stores Are Coming to These 9 Cities
Jul 4 DOV Reflecting On General Industrial Machinery Stocks’ Q1 Earnings: Dover (NYSE:DOV)
Jul 4 COST These Little-Known Costco Benefits May Surprise You
Jul 4 COST This Metric Shows Why Costco Is the Best Retail Stock to Own
Jul 3 COST 3 Reasons to Cancel Your Costco Membership in July 2024
Jul 3 COST Costco (COST) Up 30% in 1H: How Should Investors Play in 2H?
Jul 3 COST One Reason Costco Will Never Accept Coupons
Jul 3 COST Barrick Gold and Airbus have been highlighted as Zacks Bull and Bear of the Day
Hearing Aid

A hearing aid is a device designed to improve hearing by making sound audible to a person with hearing loss. Hearing aids are classified as medical devices in most countries, and regulated by the respective regulations. Small audio amplifiers such as PSAPs or other plain sound reinforcing systems cannot be sold as "hearing aids".
Early devices, such as ear trumpets or ear horns, were passive amplification cones designed to gather sound energy and direct it into the ear canal. Modern devices are computerised electroacoustic systems that transform environmental sound to make it audible, according to audiometrical and cognitive rules. Modern devices also utilize sophisticated digital signal processing to try and improve speech intelligibility and comfort for the user. Such signal processing includes feedback management, wide dynamic range compression, directionality, frequency lowering, and noise reduction.
Modern hearing aids require configuration to match the hearing loss, physical features, and lifestyle of the wearer. This process is called "fitting" and is performed by audiologists. The amount of benefit a hearing aid delivers depends in large part on the quality of its fitting. Almost all hearing aids in use in the US are digital hearing aids. Devices similar to hearing aids include the osseointegrated auditory prosthesis (formerly called the bone-anchored hearing aid) and cochlear implant.

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