February 12, 2025
Johns Hopkins Launches Free Hearing Test App

Summary: The Johns Hopkins Bloomberg School of Public Health has released the Hearing Number app, a free, multilingual tool available for iOS and Android that enables users to measure, track, and understand their hearing health as part of a global public health initiative.

Key Takeaways:

  1. Innovative Hearing Metric: The Hearing Number app introduces an easy-to-understand wellness metric, helping users track their hearing over time and identify when intervention may be needed.
  2. Global Accessibility: Available in 28 countries and multiple languages, the app will soon expand to include Chinese, French, German, and Japanese, ensuring widespread usability.
  3. Public Health Impact: As part of the Know Your Hearing campaign, the app aims to raise awareness about hearing health, emphasizing the importance of early monitoring to prevent and address hearing loss.

The Johns Hopkins Bloomberg School of Public Health released an app that is designed to make it easer for people to test their hearing. The app is part of a public health campaign to raise awareness about the importance of monitoring, protecting, and optimizing hearing at all ages.

A New Hearing Test App

The app is now available in English and Spanish for iOS and Android in 28 countries, including the U.S., and will soon be available to users around the world in Chinese, French, German, and Japanese. The Hearing Number app was created by the Johns Hopkins Bloomberg School of Public Health and developed under contract by Mimi Hearing Technologies GmbH. The app is the first hearing test available of its kind on Android.                                                                                                               

The Hearing Number app introduces the most widely used clinical measure for hearing as a wellness metric that can be tracked over time. Hearing Numbers tell someone, in decibels, the softest speech sound they can hear in each ear. Children and young adults with healthy hearing can have Hearing Numbers as low as -10 dB, and this number increases as we get older.

“The Hearing Number gives everyone a way to easily understand and think about their hearing over their lifetimes beginning as a teenager,” says Frank Lin, MD, PhD, lead creator of the app, and director of the Johns Hopkins Cochlear Center for Hearing and Public Health at the Bloomberg School. “Many of us track simple metrics about ourselves like our blood pressure and our step count, but people have never had a way to measure their hearing in the same way. By knowing their Hearing Numbers, people can understand this important aspect of their health, track the changes to their hearing that occur naturally over time, and know when to use technologies to protect their hearing and hear better.”


Further Reading


Assessing Hearing Numbers

The higher someone’s Hearing Numbers are, the harder it is for them to hear and communicate in noisy places. This Hearing Number—known clinically as the 4-frequency pure tone averages—is one of many ways that audiologists and other hearing care professionals measure hearing and is the basis of the broad categories that the World Health Organization uses to define hearing loss.

The WHO estimates that 700 million—or 1 in 10—people worldwide will have hearing loss by 2050, with over one billion young people currently at risk of preventable hearing loss due to unsafe listening practices. Risk of hearing loss increases with age, with more than 25% of people over 60 affected by hearing loss globally, according to the WHO. In the U.S., about one in three people between the ages of 65 and 74 has hearing loss, according to the National Institutes of Health.

Importance of Hearing Health

Hearing is foundational to social and cognitive health. A 2023 study led by Bloomberg School researchers found that treating hearing loss in older adults at increased risk for cognitive decline slows down loss of thinking and memory abilities. Research has also linked hearing loss to increased risk of depression, falls, fatigue, loss of thinking and memory abilities, and social isolation.  

In the U.S., the Food and Drug Administration’s approval of over-the-counter hearing aids in 2022 makes hearing technologies more accessible and affordable. Metrics like the Hearing Number will help individuals assess whether they might benefit from these technologies.

“Connecting people with their hearing through a simple metric has the potential to drive a shift in how people think about and prioritize their hearing throughout their lives,” says Lin.

The Hearing Number app is free and easy to use. Users download the app on their iOS or Android smartphone. The test requires headphones or earbuds and takes about five minutes to complete in a quiet setting. The app does not collect user personal data and users can share the app without sharing personal data.

The Know Your Hearing public health campaign, launched in 2022 by the Bloomberg School, will work with health care associations, non-profit organizations, and consumer and hearing technology companies to create broad acceptance of the Hearing Number as a tool for understanding and communicating about hearing.


Further Reading


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