Skip main navigation

Military Health System

Clear Your Browser Cache

This website has recently undergone changes. Users finding unexpected concerns may care to clear their browser's cache to ensure a seamless experience.

DHA to welcome Hearing Center of Excellence to agency

Image of The roar of a howitzer. The piercing scream of a jet engine. These are just a couple of the deafening sounds service members have to deal with. It’s just the nature of the business for the military, and no wonder why noise-induced hearing loss can be so prevalent among service members. (U.S. Air Force photo by Tech Sgt. Stephen D. Schester). The roar of a howitzer. The piercing scream of a jet engine. These are just a couple of the deafening sounds service members have to deal with. It’s just the nature of the business for the military, and no wonder why noise-induced hearing loss can be so prevalent among service members. (U.S. Air Force photo by Tech Sgt. Stephen D. Schester)

The roar of a howitzer. The piercing scream of a jet engine. These are just a couple of the deafening sounds people have to deal with during battle. It’s just the nature of the business for the military, and no wonder why noise-induced hearing loss can be so prevalent among service members. It’s also why the Military Health System works with other federal agencies, colleges and universities and public and private entities to prevent and treat those types of injuries.

“Noise-induced hearing loss and tinnitus, the ringing in the ears, are highly prevalent in the Department of Defense (DOD),” said Lynn Henselman, interim executive director of the Hearing Center of Excellence (HCE), a joint effort between the DOD and Department of Veterans Affairs (VA). “Hearing is a critical sense, especially for our service members conducting their missions, to have situational awareness. When they don’t have good hearing, it can potentially affect their ability to do the mission.”

Henselman is a VA employee assigned to the DOD for this collaboration. The center comes under formal control of the Defense Health Agency Dec. 11, 2016. But the collaboration between the military and VA on hearing loss issues goes back decades before the 2009 law that created the HCE.

“There’s always been a great partnership between hearing health providers in the VA and DOD,” said Henselman. “So it made sense for us to have this platform with the center to accomplish several strategic initiatives to improve the hearing health of service members and veterans. These initiatives focus on the prevention, diagnosis, mitigation, treatment, rehabilitation and research of hearing loss and injuries to the auditory system and sense of balance functions of the ear.”

Most of the DOD’s primary focus, according to Henselman, has been on prevention of noise-induced hearing loss, even if the nature of warfare sometimes makes preventing it difficult. That’s where the military can draw on the experience the VA brings in treatment, including rehabilitation.

“People are in the VA because they already have the injuries, so we’re used to treating them,” said Henselman. “That’s why we’re educating the military health care providers about best practices in certain hearing loss treatments and approaches to managing tinnitus.”

The VA’s research arm has done extensive work in tinnitus assessment and management. The VA’s partnership with other research laboratories continues to update VA and military clinics about the best practices and latest equipment. 

Meanwhile, the VA is learning from the military how to help people prevent noise-induced hearing loss. Henselman pointed to the HCE’s Comprehensive Hearing Health Program, an approach using three basic concepts:

  1. Protection – promoting the proper use of the right kinds of protective equipment, such as earplugs and  earmuffs
  2. Education – teaching service members and veterans about the effects of noise and how important hearing protection is to this vital sense
  3. Monitoring – testing the hearing of service members in traditionally noisy jobs, as well as getting all service members checked annually or periodically (the Army and Marine Corps test all their members every year; the Navy and Air Force do it for those exposed as part of their jobs) to ensure a ready and fit-to-fight military

“Even though our veterans come into our clinics with hearing loss, it can get worse,” said Henselman. “Since they might work in industrial areas or shoot recreationally or attend loud events, such as a NASCAR race, our patients need to be able to know what to do to protect their hearing from hazardous noise levels.”

HCE is a small organization, only about three dozen people. That’s not a lot of hands to help the millions affected by some type of hearing loss. Henselman said they leverage their support from the military services, public health offices, Veterans Health Administration and civilian hearing health organizations. “They’re the ones to help guide us to fill any gaps in care.”

You also may be interested in...

Publication
Feb 23, 2024

Assessment and Management of Dizziness and Visual Disturbances Following Concussion/Mild Traumatic Brain Injury

.PDF | 1.03 MB

This clinical recommendation provides medical staff with a single, comprehensive reference for the assessment and management of dizziness and visual disturbances following mild TBI/concussion. Dizziness and visual disturbances often present with overlapping symptoms and should prompt a provider to perform a visual and dizziness—or vestibular—assessment.

Topic
Feb 12, 2024

Hearing Center of Excellence

The Hearing Center of Excellence, or HCE, fosters and promotes the prevention, diagnosis, mitigation, treatment, rehabilitation, and research of hearing loss and auditory injury. The goal is to reduce the tangible and intangible costs of hearing loss and auditory injuries among U.S. military personnel and Veterans. HCE works with the Department of ...

Fact Sheet
Jan 9, 2024

Hearing Protector Fit-Testing Requirement in the Department of Defense

.PDF | 331.11 KB

Significant updates to the Department of Defense Instruction (DoDI) 6055.12 “Hearing Conservation Program” are expected to be published in April 2023. The significant change is a new requirement for initial hearing protector fit-testing to be conducted for all DOD personnel who have documented noise exposure greater than or equal to 95 dBA 8-hour time ...

Video
Dec 12, 2023

DHA Minute on DHA Advancement

DHA Minute on DHA Advancement

The latest DHA Minute provides an update to the workforce on DHA Advancement and how it will improve the organization’s agility and alignment to better support its mission and partnership with the Service medical departments. It also describes the new communication flow to and from the field through the Defense Health Support Activity led by U.S. Army ...

Article
Nov 7, 2023

Innovative Hearing Injury Therapies Help Doctors Improve Patient Outcomes

Innovative Hearing Injury Therapies Help Doctors Improve Patient Outcomes

Two experts from the Defense Health Agency’s Hearing Center of Excellence recently updated military health providers on these developments during a briefing during the September 2023 Clinical Community Speaker Series, provided by the DHA Continuing Education Program Office. The series offers continuing education credits and helps ensure health care ...

Video
Oct 23, 2023

DHA 10th Anniversary Sizzle

DHA 10th Anniversary Sizzle

The Defense Health Agency is now 10 years old. With over 700 medical, dental and veterinary hospitals & clinics, and a global workforce of almost 140,000 civilians and military personnel, DHA serves over 9.6 million service members, retirees and their families. Anytime, anywhere, always.

Skip subpage navigation
Refine your search
Last Updated: December 28, 2023
Follow us on Instagram Follow us on LinkedIn Follow us on Facebook Follow us on X Follow us on YouTube Sign up on GovDelivery