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You are at:Home»Wellbeing & Mental Health»Spotting the Signs of Hearing Loss at Work
hearing loss

Spotting the Signs of Hearing Loss at Work

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Posted By sme-admin on December 3, 2025 HR & Recruitment, Wellbeing & Mental Health

Many employees living with emerging or undiagnosed hearing loss don’t realise the extent of their difficulties. They learn to cope. They listen harder, concentrate longer, position themselves in specific seats, or avoid noisy situations altogether. These subtle coping strategies work for a while—until they don’t. Eventually, the effort becomes exhausting, mistakes creep in, confidence drops, and both wellbeing and performance suffer.

This article helps HR professionals, line managers, Occupational Health teams and business leaders recognise the early signs of hearing-related challenges in the workplace. It blends practical guidance, real-life scenarios, and human insight to help you identify when a supportive workplace assessment could make a transformative difference.

Hearing loss is far more common than most people think. It can be gradual, fluctuating, frequency‑specific, or situational. And crucially, it doesn’t just affect communication—it also affects confidence, energy levels, social participation, safety, and mental health.

Spotting the signs early prevents avoidable stress, misunderstandings and burnout.

Why hearing difficulties often go unnoticed

Unlike vision changes, which people may recognise quickly, hearing loss develops quietly. Many employees feel they can hear “well enough”, even when their brain is doing vast amounts of extra work to fill in the gaps.

Employees with undiagnosed hearing loss often:

  • rely heavily on lipreading
  • struggle in background noise
  • pretend they’ve heard something correctly
  • nod along to avoid embarrassment
  • withdraw from group conversations
  • avoid phone or video calls
  • feel increasingly anxious in meetings

Because these behaviours look like personality traits—or even disinterest—managers don’t always connect them to hearing difficulty.

This means employees often go years without appropriate support.

Common workplace signs of hearing-related challenges

  1. Frequently asking for repetition

Employees may often say:

  • “Sorry?”
  • “Can you repeat that?”
  • “What was the last part?”

In one‑to‑one conversations, these moments may seem insignificant, but the pattern is essential.

  1. Struggling in group meetings or fast discussions

Group settings are the most demanding environments for anyone with hearing loss. Overlapping speech, multiple speakers, and varied audio levels create confusion and fatigue.

Employees may:

  • stay quiet
  • follow conversations visually instead of auditorily
  • misinterpret details
  • appear slow to respond
  1. Difficulty using the phone

Phone calls remove visual cues, making hearing loss far more noticeable. Employees may:

  • take far longer on calls
  • avoid answering phones
  • express anxiety about misunderstanding information
  • prefer email even for simple tasks
  1. Appearing disengaged in online meetings

Virtual platforms introduce variable audio quality, inconsistent microphone use and background noise.

Common behaviours include:

  • delayed responses
  • looking confused
  • watching faces intensely
  • keeping the camera off to reduce pressure
  1. Turning one ear toward sound sources

A subtle but reliable indicator. Employees may angle their bodies or chairs in conversations or position themselves on a preferred side of the meeting table.

  1. Increased fatigue or burnout symptoms

Listening with hearing loss is *work*. The extra concentration required throughout the day leads to:

  • mental fatigue
  • irritability
  • headaches
  • reduced resilience
  • emotional overwhelm

This is frequently mislabelled as stress rather than sensory load.

  1. Mishearing instructions or missing key details

These errors can appear to be performance issues, but the root cause is auditory strain, not capability.

  1. Withdrawing socially or avoiding teamwork

People with emerging hearing loss often hide in plain sight by:

  • skipping team lunches
  • avoiding informal chats
  • staying on the edge of group conversations
  • appearing quiet or isolated

This isn’t personality—it’s coping.

  1. Complaints about background noise

Employees may struggle in open-plan offices, reception areas, call centres, or busy breakout areas.

  1. Increased reliance on written communication

This shift often signals a loss of confidence in real‑time verbal communication.

 The burnout connection: When hearing loss becomes overwhelming

Hearing‑related burnout is real—and widely misunderstood.

It doesn’t begin with workload. It begins with:

  • listening harder than everyone else
  • concentrating intensely to fill gaps
  • faking understanding
  • masking embarrassment
  • using emotional energy to “fit in”

Over weeks and months, the cognitive load escalates. People don’t burn out because they can’t hear. They burn out because they’re trying so hard *to appear like they can*.

Emotional and psychological signs

Hearing loss affects far more than hearing. Employees may experience:

  • embarrassment when asking for repetition
  • fear of appearing incompetent
  • frustration when conversations become difficult
  • anxiety about meetings
  • a sense of isolation
  • feeling “stupid”, even though they are not

These emotional signs are often more distressing than the hearing loss itself.

How to start a supportive conversation

Managers don’t need to diagnose hearing loss—they need to create space.

Try gentle, behaviour‑focused observations such as:

“I’ve noticed it looks harder to follow discussions in busy meetings. How are you finding the setup at the moment?”

or

“I’ve noticed you’ve been relying more on email lately. Would it help if we looked at how our communication setup could support you better?”

Always avoid:

  • “Are you going deaf?”
  • “You’re not listening.”
  • “You need to pay more attention.”

Compassion encourages honesty.

When to suggest a workplace assessment

A hearing‑focused workplace assessment is appropriate when:

  • repetition is frequent
  • mistakes arise from misheard details
  • the employee appears fatigued or withdrawn
  • communication confidence drops
  • phone or meeting avoidance increases
  • background noise causes strain
  • the employee expresses frustration or overwhelm

Early intervention prevents escalation.

What a hearing‑focused workplace assessment includes

A specialist sensory workplace assessment explores:

  • job role and communication demands
  • types of meetings attended
  • phone and headset usage
  • listening environments and acoustics
  • background noise levels
  • technology and equipment suitability
  • auditory fatigue and concentration patterns
  • Teams/Zoom accessibility settings
  • alerting and safety systems

It results in a tailored report with adjustments that improve clarity, communication, confidence and wellbeing.

The benefits to the employer

Supporting employees with hearing challenges leads to:

  • clearer communication
  • fewer misunderstandings
  • increased productivity
  • improved team cohesion
  • reduced fatigue and sickness
  • enhanced safety
  • stronger retention

Small, inexpensive changes often provide enormous support.

Why early action matters

Hearing difficulties rarely stay static. Untreated auditory strain can lead to:

  • reduced engagement
  • declining performance
  • conflict or misunderstanding
  • reduced professional confidence
  • social isolation
  • mental health pressures
  • full burnout

Spotting signs early protects both the employee and the organisation.

If any of these signs feel familiar within your organisation, a supportive workplace assessment can make a significant difference. Visualise Training and Consultancy specialises in sensory workplace assessments for employees with hearing loss, helping them work more comfortably, confidently and effectively.

Find out more at https://visualisetrainingandconsultancy.com/workplace-assessments/hearing-loss-workplace-assessment

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