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CENTER FOR EARLY INTERVENTION ON DEAFNESS

Audiologist

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Assistive Technology Supplier Audiologist

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Audiologist-Hearing Aid Fitter

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Audiologist

Phone, Open Hours, Reviews & Information

CENTER FOR EARLY INTERVENTION ON DEAFNESS

(510) 848-4800

1035 Grayson Street, Berkeley, California 94710, United States

 

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More practice addresses of CENTER FOR EARLY INTERVENTION ON DEAFNESS

3800 Coolidge Avenue, Oakland, California 94602, United States

(510) 275-8019

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CENTER FOR EARLY INTERVENTION ON DEAFNESS has primary practice address at 1035 Grayson Street, Berkeley, California 94710, United States. CENTER FOR EARLY INTERVENTION ON DEAFNESS works hard to the highest-quality services described below.

To make an appointment or if you have any questions please call at (510) 848-4800 for any inquiries or visit us to experience firsthand the quality services that have made us a staple in the Berkeley community since they started to work on Jun 24 2006.

Healthcare Provider works as Assistive Technology Supplier Audiologist and Audiologist and Speech-Language Pathologist, with a primary focus on Audiologist-Hearing Aid Fitter services. The license number is registered in State, which confirms the professionalism and compliance with healthcare standards. Source: NPPES NPI Registry

According to the official NPPES profile of the HealthCare Provider, the HealthCare Provider updated information on Sep 29 2021 last time, our records are a testament to our ongoing commitment to maintaining current and useful information for our customers. Pharmacy Near Me Team also tried to manually add and verify doctor appointment hours and other information with additional updates from Healthcare Insurance Companies Data. The data for this page is updated on weekly basis. Our data is cross-referenced with multiple healthcare databases(NPPES, FDA, Census, NUCC, States Divisions of Medical Quality Assurance’s Profiles Data, Health Insurance companies) to ensure the highest level of accuracy. Also, the page is reviewed quarterly by our Team to ensure accuracy.

The speech-language pathologist is the professional who engages in clinical services, prevention, advocacy, education, administration, and research in the areas of communication and swallowing across the life span from infancy through geriatrics. Speech-language pathologists address typical and atypical impairments and disorders related to communication and swallowing in the areas of speech sound production, resonance, voice, fluency, language (comprehension and expression), cognition, and feeding and swallowing.

An audiologist/hearing aid fitter is the professional who specializes in evaluating and treating people with hearing loss, conducts a wide variety of tests to determine the exact nature of an individual's hearing problem, presents a variety of treatment options to patients, dispenses and fits hearing aids, administers tests of balance to evaluate dizziness and provides hearing rehabilitation training. This classification should be used where individuals are licensed as "audiologist-hearing aid fitters" as opposed to states that license individuals as "audiologists".

(1) A specialist in evaluation, habilitation and rehabilitation of those whose communication disorders center in whole or in part in hearing function. Audiologists are autonomous professionals who identify, assess, and manage disorders of the auditory, balance and other neural systems. Audiologists provide audiological (aural) rehabilitation to children and adults across the entire age span. Audiologists select, fit and dispense amplification systems such as hearing aids and related devices. (2) An audiologist is a person qualified by a master's degree in audiology, licensed by the state, where applicable, and practicing within the scope of that license. Audiologists evaluate and treat patients with impaired hearing. They plan, direct and conduct rehabilitative programs with audiotry substitutional devises (hearing aids) and other therapy.

Source: NUCC, CMS