- Nov 1, 2022
- 180
- Tinnitus Since
- 09/2022
- Cause of Tinnitus
- being a caregiver for an elderly lady who is hard of hearing
Hello, everyone. I'm new to the board and desperate for support and advice. A year ago, I agreed to help out a 90-year-old woman with errands and light household chores because her health was declining and she could no longer drive.
Helping her was not a problem for me except for the fact that she was almost completely deaf, and she required everybody to shout at her or she wouldn't be able to hear them. She shouted too. She was as loud as a foghorn, 24 hours a day, even if you were standing right in front of her.
Early on, I wanted to quit working for her because all the mutual shouting was giving me laryngitis and headaches, but I thought it would be selfish of me to walk out on her, since I was in perfect health and she had a million health problems. Plus, she often spoke of the fact that most of her friends and family were already dead, and the ones who were still alive had children or grandchildren to take care of. It was obvious that she had set her sights on me as the ideal solution to her problems because I was married but chose not to have kids, and I worked from home, running a small business. I also lived only 30 minutes away, which was a lot closer than any of her living family members.
How could I say no to someone who was so obviously in need? So with great reluctance, I found myself working for this elderly lady one day a week for nearly 12 months. I liked her a lot and I considered her a friend, but the noise level was horrific, especially when we went for long rides in the car and she would insist on keeping up a constant stream of conversation. In addition to the headaches and laryngitis I inevitably got from trying to converse with her, there were also a couple times when I'd go home with my ears ringing, but it was always temporary. It never occurred to me that I ought to wear earplugs around her as if I were going to a rock concert.
On September 9, while spending a six-hour day at her house, I developed severe tinnitus in my left ear and an excruciating pain in my right ear that was aggravated by every word coming out of her mouth, as if she were stabbing me in the ear with an invisible knife. (I would soon learn, from spending hours searching the Internet and reading this message board, that this was called noxacusis.)
My primary care doctor had no appointments available until October 12, so I walked into the Urgent Care Center on September 23, desperate for help.
The doctor at Urgent Care said I had Eustachian tube dysfunction in my right ear. I was incredulous because I'd never had ear infections or Eustachian tube problems in my life. To me, this seemed like an incidental finding because as far as I was concerned, my real problem was noxacusis.
The doctor gave me a non-renewable prescription for 20 mg Prednisone pills to be taken just once a day for only five days. He said it might reduce the inflammation in the right ear and that it might help with the tinnitus in my left ear too.
Toward the end of the five-day course, the Prednisone hadn't helped. When I called my primary care doctor's office to let them know, they said that Prednisone doesn't kick in right away and that it also stays inside the body for a few days after you stop taking it. Their advice to me was to finish the full 5-day course and then wait a few days to see if my symptoms improve, due to the residual amount of Prednisone that would be floating around in my body. They did agree to give me another 5-day refill, which I could choose to take or not take at my own discretion.
After being off of Prednisone for only two days, I still felt no symptom relief and I was doubtful that getting back on a meager 20 mg dose for another five days would actually make a difference, so I went back to Urgent Care to ask for a second opinion. This time, I was seen by a physician's assistant who admitted that he knew very little about tinnitus and noxacusis. He was non-committal when I asked for advice on whether to get back on Prednisone or not. I asked him if he could at least give me a hearing test, and he said that they don't do that at Urgent Care. However, he said that my insurance doesn't require a referral for a hearing test and that I could make my own appointment with an audiologist if I wanted to.
On October 5, I had a hearing test. The audiologist said my hearing was in the normal range, but I was secretly skeptical as to the accuracy of the test because I'd been having a lot of difficulty hearing my husband when he speaks in a soft voice, and I was pretty sure that the test somehow wasn't reflecting that. The audiologist also said I should stop wearing earplugs to protect myself from pain because that would make things worse. This was another thing I was secretly skeptical about. I knew from reading this message board that many of you use your own discretion to decide when a situation calls for ear protection. If you don't use ear protection at all, some of you get a major setback.
On October 12, I finally got to see my primary care doctor. She gave me a referral to an ENT, but when I tried to get an appointment, I was devastated to find that almost no slots were available.
As it stands, I'm scheduled to see a physician's assistant in the ENT department tomorrow. I'm hoping that he doesn't call in sick and that my car doesn't break down, because if this appointment doesn't work out, there are literally no appointments on the calendar until late January, and I can't wait that long to get help. I've had suicidal thoughts, on and off, since early October, and I'm running out of ideas for home remedies. I've tried almost everything people on this board have suggested for hyperacusis and tinnitus, but it's all been hit-or-miss. Symptom-wise, I have good days and bad days, and I can never figure out whether certain things I've tried at home can be credited or blamed for that.
How do you guys hang on, especially during the first few months? My symptoms are so debilitating that I've been unable to work since mid-September.
I'm sorry this post is so long. If you made it this far, thank you for reading.
Helping her was not a problem for me except for the fact that she was almost completely deaf, and she required everybody to shout at her or she wouldn't be able to hear them. She shouted too. She was as loud as a foghorn, 24 hours a day, even if you were standing right in front of her.
Early on, I wanted to quit working for her because all the mutual shouting was giving me laryngitis and headaches, but I thought it would be selfish of me to walk out on her, since I was in perfect health and she had a million health problems. Plus, she often spoke of the fact that most of her friends and family were already dead, and the ones who were still alive had children or grandchildren to take care of. It was obvious that she had set her sights on me as the ideal solution to her problems because I was married but chose not to have kids, and I worked from home, running a small business. I also lived only 30 minutes away, which was a lot closer than any of her living family members.
How could I say no to someone who was so obviously in need? So with great reluctance, I found myself working for this elderly lady one day a week for nearly 12 months. I liked her a lot and I considered her a friend, but the noise level was horrific, especially when we went for long rides in the car and she would insist on keeping up a constant stream of conversation. In addition to the headaches and laryngitis I inevitably got from trying to converse with her, there were also a couple times when I'd go home with my ears ringing, but it was always temporary. It never occurred to me that I ought to wear earplugs around her as if I were going to a rock concert.
On September 9, while spending a six-hour day at her house, I developed severe tinnitus in my left ear and an excruciating pain in my right ear that was aggravated by every word coming out of her mouth, as if she were stabbing me in the ear with an invisible knife. (I would soon learn, from spending hours searching the Internet and reading this message board, that this was called noxacusis.)
My primary care doctor had no appointments available until October 12, so I walked into the Urgent Care Center on September 23, desperate for help.
The doctor at Urgent Care said I had Eustachian tube dysfunction in my right ear. I was incredulous because I'd never had ear infections or Eustachian tube problems in my life. To me, this seemed like an incidental finding because as far as I was concerned, my real problem was noxacusis.
The doctor gave me a non-renewable prescription for 20 mg Prednisone pills to be taken just once a day for only five days. He said it might reduce the inflammation in the right ear and that it might help with the tinnitus in my left ear too.
Toward the end of the five-day course, the Prednisone hadn't helped. When I called my primary care doctor's office to let them know, they said that Prednisone doesn't kick in right away and that it also stays inside the body for a few days after you stop taking it. Their advice to me was to finish the full 5-day course and then wait a few days to see if my symptoms improve, due to the residual amount of Prednisone that would be floating around in my body. They did agree to give me another 5-day refill, which I could choose to take or not take at my own discretion.
After being off of Prednisone for only two days, I still felt no symptom relief and I was doubtful that getting back on a meager 20 mg dose for another five days would actually make a difference, so I went back to Urgent Care to ask for a second opinion. This time, I was seen by a physician's assistant who admitted that he knew very little about tinnitus and noxacusis. He was non-committal when I asked for advice on whether to get back on Prednisone or not. I asked him if he could at least give me a hearing test, and he said that they don't do that at Urgent Care. However, he said that my insurance doesn't require a referral for a hearing test and that I could make my own appointment with an audiologist if I wanted to.
On October 5, I had a hearing test. The audiologist said my hearing was in the normal range, but I was secretly skeptical as to the accuracy of the test because I'd been having a lot of difficulty hearing my husband when he speaks in a soft voice, and I was pretty sure that the test somehow wasn't reflecting that. The audiologist also said I should stop wearing earplugs to protect myself from pain because that would make things worse. This was another thing I was secretly skeptical about. I knew from reading this message board that many of you use your own discretion to decide when a situation calls for ear protection. If you don't use ear protection at all, some of you get a major setback.
On October 12, I finally got to see my primary care doctor. She gave me a referral to an ENT, but when I tried to get an appointment, I was devastated to find that almost no slots were available.
As it stands, I'm scheduled to see a physician's assistant in the ENT department tomorrow. I'm hoping that he doesn't call in sick and that my car doesn't break down, because if this appointment doesn't work out, there are literally no appointments on the calendar until late January, and I can't wait that long to get help. I've had suicidal thoughts, on and off, since early October, and I'm running out of ideas for home remedies. I've tried almost everything people on this board have suggested for hyperacusis and tinnitus, but it's all been hit-or-miss. Symptom-wise, I have good days and bad days, and I can never figure out whether certain things I've tried at home can be credited or blamed for that.
How do you guys hang on, especially during the first few months? My symptoms are so debilitating that I've been unable to work since mid-September.
I'm sorry this post is so long. If you made it this far, thank you for reading.