HENRY COUNTY, IOWA – Today, Sen. Chuck
Grassley (R-Iowa) met with Iowa Audiology President and CEO Dr. Jason Aird to
discuss the Food and Drug Administration’s (FDA) finalization of a key rule
allowing hearing aids to be sold over-the-counter – a
bipartisan effort Grassley has led for over five years. They also discussed
Grassley’s support for the
Medicare
Audiologist Access and Services Act, which would modernize Medicare rules for audiologists – making it
easier for seniors to access an audiologist. Grassley then held a Q&A with health
care providers in the Mount Pleasant community.
“After shepherding the Over-the-Counter Hearing Aids Act
through Congress in 2017 along with Senator Warren, we still had our work cut
out for us. We continued pressing the FDA to implement the law as Congress
intended, and we confronted entrenched special interests who didn’t want to see
this commonsense law succeed. Thankfully, two months ago, the FDA finalized
regulations for over-the-counter hearing aids. None of this would’ve been
possible without the input and hard work of Iowa audiologists, including Dr.
Aird. It’s been an honor to see this effort through, and I’m glad more Iowans
will now have access to affordable over-the-counter hearing aids,” Grassley said.
“I appreciate Senator Grassley’s work on
over-the-counter hearing aids and modernizing Medicare so that beneficiaries
have better access to the audiology services that they need. Audiologists play
an essential role in the diagnosis and treatment of hearing loss. I thank
Senator Grassley for meeting with health care providers like myself about our
role in serving Iowans. Our work, along with the implementation of the Over-the-Counter Hearing Aid Act, will
improve access to hearing care services and lower costs for many consumers,” said Dr. Jason Aird, president and CEO of
Iowa Audiology and an active member of the Academy of Doctors of Audiology.
Grassley meets with Iowans in Mount
Pleasant to discuss over-the-counter hearing aids. Additional pictures are
available HERE.
According to the National Institute on
Deafness and Other Communication Disorders (NIDCD), nearly
38 million Americans experience some degree of hearing loss. Nearly half of
adults 75 or older and one-third of adults between 65 and 74
experience difficulty hearing. However, only a small percentage – around
14 percent – of those who could benefit from hearing aids use them, oftentimes
due to high costs. Grassley has heard from Iowans who have reported paying
$5,000 or even $10,000 for hearing aids.
In 2017, Congress passed the
FDA Reauthorization Act, which included
Grassley’s
Over-the-Counter
Hearing Aid Act. Their bill
required the FDA to issue regulations establishing over-the-counter hearing
aids, specifically for those with mild to moderate hearing loss, no later than
three years from the date of enactment. The FDA slow-rolled the
regulatory-crafting process, missing its first statutory deadline by a year.
After the public comment period closed on January 18 of this year, and the FDA
failed to provide a clear timeline for finalizing regulations, Grassley and
Warren ramped up pressure by introducing the
Delivering
Over-the-Counter Hearing Aids Now Act. The bill required the FDA to speed up its timeline for issuing its
final regulations.
At the end of June, Grassley and Warren
released a comprehensive
report
showing how dominant hearing aid manufacturers were attempting to diminish the
effectiveness of over-the-counter hearing aids. They also called on the FDA
commissioner to adopt a final rule that promotes competition, reduces prices
and meets high standards of safety and effectiveness.
Read more about Grassley’s OTC hearing aids
effort in an op-ed he published
HERE.
-30-