Re-opening your audiology practice after the COVID-19 pandemic can be both exciting and stressful for you and your patients. Being able to offer audiological services in a safe manner will be a step in the right direction to achieving our “new normal,” will reinstate some form of revenue for your practice, and most importantly, will bring much-needed service back to your patients who rely on their hearing to stay in touch with their family and friends, now more than ever.
Keep up to date with frequent reviews of the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) website and keep a close eye on your professional associations. Recommendations and information are updating faster than it can be published (Cavitt, 2020; Kornak, 2020). Review the following steps and fine-tune them for your situation to stay calm and confident as you step back into your practice.
Recent Posts
Update on Hearing Device Services Codes
As released publicly in the March 10, 2026, AMA’s Errata & Technical Corrections CPT 2026, the parentheticals related to code 92628 (Evaluation for hearing candidacy)…
Intratympanic Steroid Therapy as a Salvage Treatment for Sudden Sensorineural Hearing Loss
Fernandez et al. (2026) completed a retrospective analysis of 86 patients seen between 2019 and 2024 with sudden sensorineural hearing loss (SSNHL). This analysis compared…
Clinical Superiority of Belly-Tendon Montage Over Others for Recording Air-Conducted Ocular Vestibular Evoked Myogenic Potential
In a recent study published by Raveendran and Singh (2026), a number of ocular vestibular evoked myogenic potential (oVEMP) electrode montages were compared. This study…


