No. The main benefit of a CROS transmitter is to make sounds on the side of the poorer ear available. A good example is driving in the car. If your left ear is much poorer than your right, you will have a great deal of difficulty being a passenger in a car with the steering wheel on the left. A CROS transmitter would allow you to “ride shotgun” and still hear the driver. Other common settings where CROS transmitters help are at dinner tables or when playing cards.
What are CROS and BiCROS Hearing Aids and Who Needs Them?
How CROS / BiCROS systems help people with asymmetrical or unilateral hearing losses and single-sided deafness, as well as a guide to the currently available CROS and BiCROS systems)
:format(webp))
:format(webp))
:format(webp))
:format(webp))
:format(webp))