It puzzles me because an arthritic knee is a benign condition, yet in the US medicare pays for joint replacement based on improved quality of like as the outcome. Why isn't improved quality of life important for individuals with tinnitus? And why after learning that tinnitus originates in the brain and not the ear, is tinnitus still owned by ENTs?
BAM!
@TuxedoCat
Absolutely just nailed it. I'll tell you the difference; the arthritic knee has a visible component to it. Patients start to limp, they get a cane, a walker, etc. We don't appear to have any outward suffering, yet we are.
My experience with ENT's is exactly the same as yours, I'm sure. Unless there is a physical, medical reason or known correctable etiology for your tinnitus, there is absolutely no reason to see an ENT. They are clearly NOT trained in tinnitus management or therapies.
If anything, this should be in the neurologist field of expertise. It's a brain disorder, and that is where the cure lies.
Subsequently started to challenge healthcare providers, which they don't like
.. and they also don't like it when you come to the appointment with them with the latest research and papers, and due to their arrogance, they don't want to talk about it because they clearly are uneducated and unprepared.
Challenging the "experts", even in things like research fundraising, is important in directing where those research dollars will eventually go.
I know this sounds off topic, but these are all things that we patients think about when wanting to do something positive with the money we have. So maybe;
"Would you be more willing to donate to tinnitus research if you knew the research is appropriately focused on the latest clinical data that is working towards effective and tangible therapies/cure?"
Maybe others like TuxedoCat think sound therapies ARE a waste of time, and want research to be directed towards brain chemistry or other actions of mechanism. Are people more willing to donate to a cause that represents a true cure that may take more time (say, 5-10 years), or are they more willing to donate to things like habituation mechanisms that will be available in the near-term (1-3 years)?
Just kicking around ideas...