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Subtle hearing or vision difficulties

Subtle hearing or vision difficulties refer to a mild drop in hearing or sight, moderate enough to stay invisible to others, but very real for the person concerned. They hear and see, provided they make a constant effort, especially when the environment gets harder: several voices at once, low light, small print.

Because the difficulty goes unnoticed and the person adapts without always saying so, these difficulties are often mistaken for distraction or slowness. In reality, a sense working at reduced speed takes up a lot of attention to compensate, which leaves all the fewer resources for the rest of the day.

In a lively room, following a conversation with several people can be like piecing together a puzzle with missing pieces: you catch one word in two, fill in from context, watch facial expressions to bridge the gaps. This reconstruction work happens in silence, with no one around suspecting it.

That is the whole point of a subtle hearing or vision difficulty: it does not show on the face and is rarely apparent in a quick exchange. The person answers, nods, smiles, sometimes having guessed more than heard or seen. Over time, this constant effort explains an end-of-day fatigue that those around often put down to something else.

A constant effort, invisible from the outside

The sense is not absent, it works with a reduced margin that shrinks as soon as the situation gets harder. Several signs come up often:

  • requests to repeat things in group conversations;
  • understanding that drops in noise, at a distance or in low light;
  • reading errors, eyes that close quickly, headaches at the end of the day;
  • marked fatigue, the result of the attention spent compensating.

What makes exchanges easier

A few simple courtesies clearly reduce the effort required:

  • speaking face to face, in a quiet, well-lit spot, without covering your mouth;
  • favouring writing or a visual aid for important information;
  • allowing time to answer and rephrasing rather than repeating word for word.

Possible accommodations

Needs depend on the sense concerned and its degree, but several accommodations come up often.

  • At school: a PAP (a personalised support plan for learning difficulties, in France) or a PPS (an individualised schooling plan for disabled students, in France) can provide a suitable seat, written materials and extra time, with the support of an AESH (a teaching assistant for students with disabilities, in France) if needed.
  • At work: the RQTH (official recognition of disabled worker status, in France), through the MDPH (the local disability rights office, in France), makes it possible to obtain a better-lit or quieter workstation, assistive tools and instructions given in writing.
  • In daily life: choosing quiet places for important conversations, signalling one's need without embarrassment, and relying on the assistive aids available.

Explanations based on your profile

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Subtle hearing or vision difficulties explained to a Child

0–12 years old

Sometimes you hear or see, but it's like looking through slightly foggy glass, you understand, but it takes a lot of effort. That's what we call subtle hearing or vision difficulties.

The person isn't distracted: it's just that their ears or eyes work twice as hard to understand what's happening around them. It's like running uphill, you get there, but you tire quickly!

  • They may say "what?" more often, especially when several people are talking at the same time
  • They may get very tired by the end of the day, because their brain has been working non-stop
  • They might make small mistakes when reading, or their eyes close more quickly

It's normal, it's not their fault, their sense just needs a little boost to work well.

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