|
|
|
|
|
by gibolt
1146 days ago
|
|
I feel for you, but in this case it sounds reasonable, at least as a first step. OTC medicines tend to be less potent than their prescribed counterparts. This is to protect people who don't know what they need from themselves (and many other reasons). You are going to have tons of new low quality new options, and setting hard limits on their potential damage to new users (either due to misuse or poor design) seems like a good approach until the dust settles. |
|
There are reasonable limitations to be made here: requiring initial settings to be low, restricting how quickly volume can be increased while they're being programmed, having different drivers for different levels of hearing loss (which is already the case for prescription hearing aids), etc. But individual responsibility is fundamentally both a requirement and reasonable presumption. We don't let people who commit suicide by swallowing a bottle full of sleeping pills prevent the rest of society from having access to sleeping pills, nor would we presume that a prescription magically stops people from getting suicidal. Yet the consequences for misprogramming OTC hearing aids are much lower than the consequences for not taking sleeping pills as directed.