Buy-One-Get-One-Free Hearing Aid Sale Going On Now At Advanced Audiology For KHTS Listeners

Santa Clarita Audiologist Nola Aronson

A special buy-one-get-one-free hearing aid sale is happening at Advanced Audiology now for customers who say they found out about it through KHTS.

Owner Nola Aronson talked about how some people feel hearing aids are too expensive during her latest appearance on “The Senior Hour” on KHTS, and so made the decision to hold the sale in the spirit of the holidays.

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“If you say you heard this at KHTS Radio, I am going to give you my holiday special, and that is a ‘buy one hearing aid, get one free,’” Aronson said, noting that this isn’t just off the manufacturer’s price. “You can buy one, get one free at my everyday low prices on top-of-the-line hearing airs that give you the quality of sound in a noisy environment.”

The Santa Clarita audiologist went on to say that she wants people to be able to enjoy their families during the holidays without being held back by hearing loss.

“Don’t miss out on the conversation, don’t stop doing things that you love to do — it’s not necessary,” she said.

For individuals who still think hearing aids are too expensive, Aronson noted that Advanced Audiology has hearing aids for every budget, adding that the prices are only a bit higher than big box stores because they are bundled with services the stores don’t provide.

“The reason the price is higher is because we give full service, and we make sure that it is functioning for you and your specific needs,” Aronson explained. “So we spend a lot of time (with our patients).”

For instance, Aronson recently met with a patient who was thinking about getting a less expensive, mail-order hearing aid from his insurance company.

However, when he researched what was involved in the process, the patient was surprised about the lack of personalized service.

“He told me you call, you have to fax in or email in your hearing test that you get from a person like myself, then they program hearing aids for you and they send them back through the mail with a video showing you how to put them in,” Aronson said.

After he asked what he would do if they don’t work properly or sound right, the patient says he was told he might be able to get them adjusted in Burbank with an appointment, or that he can send them back through the mail to have the insurance company re-program the hearing aids again.

“This is a medical device, and it’s not like eye glasses where you get your prescription and you put your eye glasses on,” Aronson said. “It doesn’t work like that when it comes to hearing aids… Another patient with the same problem, with the same hearing loss might react totally differently to the same exact hearing aids, but it all depends on what it sounds like once it goes in the ear.”

Aronson continued, “There’s no guarantee (a less expensive hearing aid will be) correct, that they’re comfortable, that they even have the sound quality — so don’t be fooled about price.”

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