Dealing With Hearing Loss in Dogs
To Keep or Not to Keep
A dog owner who suspects that it may be deaf can have it tested by a specialized veterinarian. The BAER test is 100% accurate and can be performed on any dog over the age of six weeks. Most owners, however, can rely on observation to determine whether a dog can hear. Any reasonably alert dog will respond to sounds, especially sounds that indicate the presence of an affectionate owner. Sounds like the jingling of keys will cause different reactions in dogs with hearing loss in only one ear.
An important issue concerning hearing loss in dogs is the ability of an owner to teach a deaf dog the skills it needs to be safe. A dog that can’t be called away from a busy street can never be allowed near a busy street. The safety of others is also a consideration. A dog’s owner should be able to calm an excited dog that is in a position to harm another person or animal. While no studies have been done to compare hearing with non-hearing dogs, owners who know from experience that hearing loss in dogs has not affected their ability to train and communicate with their own dogs will testify that a dog’s personality has more to do with its success as a pet than its hearing does. Dogs, after all, are not expected to communicate with human language – hearing or not. And dogs do not depend on the sense of hearing as much as humans do. You can not sneak up on a dog even if it can’t hear. Most dogs have sharp eyes and a keen sense of smell, after all.













