Arkansas Senate Bill 118 has been signed into law, updating the state’s audiology scope of practice statute. The law allows audiologists who are licensed to evaluate, diagnose, manage, and treat auditory and vestibular conditions; prescribe and order prescription hearing aids; perform cerumen removal and foreign body extraction; and order but not interpret imaging, blood tests, and cultures related to hearing and balance disorders.
Recent Posts
Medicare Audiology Access Improvement Act Reintroduced
Bipartisan legislation to modernize Medicare coverage of audiology services was reintroduced in the U.S. House of Representatives last week. The Medicare Audiology Access Improvement Act…
Academy, ADA, and ASHA Support Critical Medicare Audiology Legislation
The American Academy of Audiology, the American Speech-Language-Hearing Association (ASHA), and the Academy of Doctors of Audiology (ADA) enthusiastically endorse the Medicare Audiology Access Improvement…
Dizziness, Weightless Tongue, Baby Feet: Challenges Astronauts Face Upon Return to Earth
A recent online article published in the Deccan Herald describes many of the symptoms experienced by astronauts when initially entering microgravity and re-entering Earth’s gravity after…