It's fair for people affected by tinnitus to be upset about the slow progress in research and treatment.
However, it's important to remind everyone that there is hope -- and more progress has been made in the past 20 years than in the previous 2000. It's reasonable to suggest that improvements in understanding will lead to better treatments. However, we must also acknowledge that tinnitus, especially in severe cases, represents a smaller subset of the population, which may not attract as much research talent and funding.
My opinion on responding here has fluctuated over time. I usually comment when I hear things that might promote false hope or are too aggressive because false hope has negatively impacted me regarding tinnitus. Misguided anger can lead to further hopelessness. When complaints turn into misdirected anger, I try to address it. Many people come here and don't post at all. While some might share the sentiment of "I hate that it's taking so long," extreme comments like "THE DEVICE IS A FAILURE BECAUSE I DON'T HAVE IT NOW OMG BURN IT ALL DOWN I HATE LIFE" can be harmful to those already struggling psychologically.
I choose to counter that sentiment with a cautiously optimistic yet realistic approach to timelines and outcomes.
For the past thirty years, the "gold standard" has been akin to telling someone without a limb or with chronic pain to "get used to it" or "think differently" about it or to bombard their ears with noise to counter the phantom sound. Any tangible option from a respected researcher is obviously wanted as soon as possible. According to some studies, it's also considered no better than a placebo.
There's also a video of the leader of TRT implying that people who don't get better from it are essentially bad people or malingerers. Depending on where you live, before you're even offered this expensive treatment (typically not covered by insurance), you might have to go through ineffective steroid treatments, countless useless exams, and potentially procedures that only deplete your bank account, resolve, and quality of relationships with loved ones. It's exhausting being your own advocate when most doctors admit they have no idea how to help you. We need to cut them some slack -- no one truly knows what's going on, and emerging research will likely take another 50 years to start helping the way most of us expect for other conditions.
Coupled with significant anxiety and distress from tinnitus, the recourse may involve medications with severe side effects, leading to desperation. I understand why people post here and vent their frustrations. I understand why they are upset with their healthcare systems and doctors.
This is the perfect place for that to happen instead of at home or work, as long as the dialogue remains constructive.
As a relatively recent sufferer, I can only imagine the frustration of seeing trials and research stall when the science and devices already exist but are delayed by business decisions. It's infuriating, but there's little anyone here can do about how the world works. Pretending that large pharmaceutical companies can be swayed to move faster is unrealistic.
There's reason to have hope. Yes, progress is slow. No, there's not much anyone can do to speed it up. Yes, it's frustrating not to get weekly updates, but that's standard business practice. The research is groundbreaking. It might not help everyone, but I don't see anything better coming in the near future for which to be hopeful.