Jay, I didn't realize that you aren't SSD. I learn something new every day!
At one point I thought being SSD was a requirement of the BAHA, but as I was telling this to someone at the ANA Symposium in Chicago (you know me, Jan the BAHA "expert"), my doctor who had just given a talk on "hearing options" was standing next to me. He (very nicely) corrected me. He said that whether or not you are a candidate is based on hearing loss; it's a case by case basis when it comes to deciding who would benefit from a BAHA. I learned something new that day, too
I thought I had 100% directionality with my BAHA and told my doc that numerous times. He said there were no studies, but one day he and a partner of his decided to conduct one and I was invited to participate. I was placed in a sound booth (the kind they use to test your hearing) with speakers all around me - front, back, sides, corners, etc - the door was closed and my back was to the audiologist. She sent sounds with different pitches into the booth and I had to tell her which speaker I thought the sound was coming out of. Two of the sounds I specifically remember were a barking dog and a siren. The test was probably about 15 minutes and I thought I nailed it. The audiologist wouldn't confirm or deny that.
Several months later I asked my doc about the study and he said it showed that the participants did not have directionality with their BAHAs, even though some of them felt they did. When I asked if I was one of them, he just chuckled. Lots of times perception seems like reality, what can I say?
Lisa, good point. But the important part is that with the BAHA you know that there is sound - a siren in this case - because you hear it. When you are SSD (or your hearing is compromised) you may not hear the siren at all. My BAHA enables me to hear the siren (or the beeping horns) and alerts me that there is "something" in my vicinity that I need to locate and pay attention to.
Before the BAHA, I would totally ignore someone standing on my "bad" side trying to have a conversation with me unless I knew they were there. I couldn't hear them, so if I didn't physically sense their presence they were in essence "talking to the wall". If I knew they were there, I would turn my body so my good ear could pick up what they were saying to me.
With the BAHA, I can hear people on my "bad" side whether or not I realize they are physically there or not.
Make sense?
Jan