Best Careers 2009: Audiologist

By Marty Nemko

Posted: December 11, 2008

Overview. One-on-one helping careers are among the most pleasant. And this one offers the promise that over your career, the tools to help patients will get better and better. Already, today's computer-controlled hearing aids are more effective and enjoyable than traditional ones. America's most famous user: Bill Clinton. Another plus for this profession is that you'll often get out of the office. You might spend part of your day in a hospital clinic, part in a school, and part at a hearing aid store. If you're bright and ambitious, you might even be on a research team developing the next generation of hearing aids.

Yet another advantage is that audiology is an under-the-radar career—few people consider it, so competition isn't as keen as it might be. You'd think demand for audiologists would be rapidly increasing, with all the aging boomers and the increased special-education testing of children. But increasingly, lower-salaried ear technicians do much of what audiologists do. So, job growth in this small profession (13,000 people nationwide) is expected to be just average. The education requirement isn't, however: Now, a doctor of audiology degree is required.

A Day in the Life. Your first patient is a severely deaf child who has just been fitted with a surgically implanted cochlear implant, a device that bypasses the ear and sends signals directly to the auditory nerve. Your job is to optimize the device for the child's needs and train the child how to interpret the sounds—they're different from sounds heard by the ear. Your second patient is an 80-year-old having trouble retaining his balance. You examine him and provide an analysis that will help his physician determine the cause. Most of your patients, though, are children and older adults with limited hearing loss. You counsel them about hearing aids and in some cases deliver the good news that the only treatment required is removing their excess earwax.

Salary Data

Median (with eight years in the field): $62,200

25th to 75th percentile (with eight or more years of experience): $57,700-$81,200

Note: With the now required Au.D. and/or C.C.C.-A certifications, salaries are often $85,000 or more.

(Data provided by PayScale.com)

Training

Smart Specialty

Developing hearing-loss-prevention programs in factories and other loud workplaces

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The role of an Audiologist

The Audiologist will more than likely not be around for a long while. Even with more and more people being implanted, not everyone is a candidate for an implant or even wants one. And that's where we step in. The one thing that worries me is the many under qualified dispensers selling hearing aids at ridiculous prices and giving audiologists a bad name.

Tiffany of TN @ Nov 15, 2009 18:39:29 PM

Think About It

An audiologists profession is dependent almost entirely on the existence of present day hearing aid technology. If/when that technology changes and gets better, the use of audiologists may decline. For instance, if it goes entirely to the hearing implant route, audiologists may have a difficult time making a living, unless they are just doing the hearing tests for the surgeons who do the implants. Already they train hearing aid technicians who can basically do everything an audiologist does, including testing and prescribing, and the regional law is pretty much the only thing that preserves the audiologist scope of practice. If you want to spend all that time in school (about 4 years for either), go to med school and then do a residency and become an ENT.

Chris of FL @ Nov 10, 2009 15:42:45 PM

I WOULD!!!!!!

I WOULD LOVE TO HAVE THIS JOB!!!!!!!!!!!

jubjub of ME @ Nov 03, 2009 16:51:53 PM

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