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    Patient Stories
    Thursday, May 1, 2025

    The sound of success: How improved hearing aids career change

    Topics in this Post
    • Ear Health
    Charlie Pierce

    When does a trickle sound like a waterfall? After you get hearing aids, according to Charlie Pierce.

    "I spent so many years not hearing the things that I can hear now. I can hear the smallest noise in the next room," he says. "It's incredible."

    Charlie's improved hearing has done more than amplify the sounds he hears ― it helped the 55-year-old start a new career.

    Construction work and overcoming addiction

    For over 40 years, Charlie worked in construction. But his career was beginning to take a toll on his body, and he felt drawn to a different path — working with the Transportation Security Administration (TSA).

    "I started the application process to work for the TSA, but I talked myself out of it," Charlie recalls, feeling that the timing wasn't right.

    Charlie continued his job as a construction superintendent in Tennessee. He also overcame a 38-year addiction to drugs and alcohol, thanks to attending two addiction recovery programs in 2019. He and wife, Amy Pierce, were married the following year.

    Pierces"

    Amy and I agreed that we wouldn't make any other major life changes until I was a year sober," he says.

    Making a change

    In September 2022, the Pierces decided to relocate to Faribault, Minnesota, to be closer to family. When Charlie saw an advertisement for TSA positions at the Minneapolis-St. Paul International Airport, he knew just what to do.

    "It seemed like a God moment that I was seeing it again, so I applied," he says.

    During the application screening and medical exam process, Charlie learned that years of construction and power tools had taken more than just a toll on his muscles and joints. He had hearing loss that could potentially exclude him from a TSA career.

    Time was of the essence for Charlie to address his hearing issue. He knew that his application would be denied for medical reasons if he failed the hearing test.

    "I knew I needed to see someone right away," he says. "I wasn't just going to give up at that point."

    Audiology, hearing aids to the rescue

    A week later, Charlie's hearing was evaluated by an audiologist at Mayo Clinic Health System in Albert Lea, Minnesota.

    Charlie's hearing was thoroughly tested, which revealed that the damage was different in each ear. Typically, when hearing changes, it happens equally in both ears.  

    The audiology team recommended hearing aids to improve it. Hearing aids digitally process incoming sounds. They make soft sounds more audible while keeping a limit on the overall output so that the volume isn't too loud.  

    Charlie was fitted with hearing aids that have a small instrument behind the ear connected to a domed earpiece in each canal. This style is comfortable for people like Charlie who wear glasses. They're also well-suited for the field he wanted to enter, which requires him to hear as clearly as possible in difficult environments with a lot of background noise. Each hearing aid was programmed to best correct his hearing loss.

    Hearing aids

    Some professions — including construction — increase the risk of hearing loss due to loud noises from equipment or instruments used. Other examples include mechanics, truck drivers, farmers, factory workers, surgeons and dentists. If your employer requires hearing protection on the job, use it.  

    Noisy hobbies, like woodworking, hunting and engine repairs, should also include hearing protection when sound levels are high.

    Hearing loss has an additive effect over a lifetime so preserving hearing early makes a difference.  

    Moving forward

    Two weeks after his initial appointment, Charlie got his new hearing aids and received the necessary paperwork and testing so he would clear the employment medical evaluation. He was hired by the TSA and began training.

    Charlie says he is enjoying his new career at the airport and is grateful for the expertise of the Mayo Clinic Health System Audiology team.

    "They really went above and beyond to help make all this stuff come to fruition for me," he says. "They're masters of their craft and knew exactly what needed to be done."

    By Mayo Clinic Health System staff

    Topics in this Post
    • Ear Health

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