Hearing Loss Grants in Australia: Funding for the Deaf and Hard of Hearing

Approximately 3.6 million Australians live with hearing loss — and that number is growing as the population ages. For Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander children, otitis media (middle ear infection) causes high rates of conductive hearing loss, with profound consequences for language development, education, and social connection. The Deaf community has its own rich language (AUSLAN — Australian Sign Language) and culture. Grant funding supports hearing screening, ear health in Indigenous communities, cochlear implant access, AUSLAN services, and the support services that enable full participation for Deaf and hard of hearing Australians.

Hearing health in Australia

Scale

  • Approximately 3.6 million Australians live with hearing loss (approximately 14% of population)
  • By 2060, projected to rise to 7.8 million
  • Hearing loss is the most common disability in Australia after mental health conditions
  • 1 in 6 Australians will experience hearing loss in their lifetime

Indigenous ear health crisis

  • Otitis media (middle ear infection) affects approximately 90% of Aboriginal children in remote communities at some point
  • Chronic and recurrent otitis media is a leading cause of conductive hearing loss
  • Hearing loss linked to language delay, school performance, and social and emotional wellbeing
  • Otitis media rates in Indigenous children are among the highest globally

Types of hearing loss

  • Conductive: in the outer/middle ear (often treatable) — otitis media-related
  • Sensorineural: in the inner ear/auditory nerve (often permanent) — ageing, noise, genetics
  • Mixed: both types
  • Deafness: severe or profound hearing loss

The Deaf community

Many people with profound deafness identify with the Deaf community — a linguistic and cultural community using AUSLAN. For many Deaf Australians, deafness is not a disability but a cultural identity.

Government hearing health funding

Hearing Australia (Commonwealth Hearing Services Programme)

Government-funded hearing services for eligible Australians (pensioners, children, Indigenous Australians).

Newborn Hearing Screening Programme

Universal newborn screening — detecting hearing loss at birth.

NDIS

Hearing-related disability supports including communication devices and cochlear implant maintenance.

Australian Hearing Hub

National research and clinical hub at Macquarie University.

Philanthropic hearing health funders

Hear and Say

Cochlear implant and auditory-verbal therapy for children — Queensland-based.

Deafness Forum Australia

Peak body for deafness and hearing loss.

Cochlear Foundation

Cochlear Limited's philanthropic arm — hearing research and access.

RIDBC (Royal Institute for Deaf and Blind Children)

Education and services for children with hearing or vision impairment.

Aussie Deaf Kids

Parent support and advocacy for deaf children.

Deaf Australia

Representing the Deaf community — AUSLAN and cultural rights.

Aboriginal medical services

Many Indigenous health services have ear health programmes.

Types of funded hearing health programmes

Screening and early detection

  • Newborn hearing screening (already universal, but follow-up gaps)
  • School-age hearing screening
  • Adult hearing screening programmes
  • Ear checks in Indigenous communities
  • Audiological assessment for high-risk populations

Indigenous ear health

  • Otitis media prevention and treatment in remote communities
  • Ear health workers in Aboriginal communities
  • Hearing screening at Aboriginal health services
  • HEAL (Hearing and Ear Assessment for All) programmes
  • Grommets access for children with chronic otitis media

Cochlear implants and technology

  • Cochlear implant access (significant cost barrier without funding)
  • Hearing aid access for low-income adults
  • Bone-anchored hearing aids
  • Hearing assistive technology

Communication and language

  • AUSLAN classes and AUSLAN interpreters
  • Auditory-verbal therapy for children
  • Speech pathology for hearing-impaired children
  • Captioning services
  • Communication access (hearing loops, captioning in events)

Education

  • Support for Deaf and hard of hearing students in mainstream schools
  • Auslan-bilingual education
  • Itinerant hearing services in schools
  • Transition support for tertiary study

Employment

  • Workplace adjustments for employees with hearing loss
  • Interpreter services in employment
  • Career support for Deaf professionals

Aged care

  • Hearing assessment in aged care
  • Hearing aid maintenance for aged care residents
  • Communication training for aged care staff
  • Dementia and hearing loss connection

Mental health

  • Mental health for Deaf people in AUSLAN
  • Social isolation linked to hearing loss
  • Depression in older adults with hearing loss

Research

  • Otitis media prevention research
  • Cochlear implant outcomes
  • AUSLAN linguistics
  • Noise-induced hearing loss prevention

The otitis media-education pipeline

In remote Aboriginal communities, otitis media creates a devastating chain:
1. Infant gets recurrent ear infections
2. Conductive hearing loss develops
3. Language acquisition is delayed
4. Child starts school already behind
5. School performance suffers (can't hear the teacher)
6. Educational disadvantage compounds

Early treatment of otitis media — grommets, antibiotics, environmental improvements — can break this chain. Grant funding for Indigenous ear health is an investment in closing Australia's education gap.

Grant application considerations

Indigenous ear health priority

The ear health crisis in remote Indigenous communities is one of Australia's most documented and preventable health inequities. Applications addressing otitis media — through community health workers, screening, treatment access — are high-priority.

Communication access

Many Deaf Australians cannot access services without AUSLAN interpreters or captioning. Applications supporting communication access — training interpreters, funding captioning — address a systemic inclusion barrier.

Hearing and ageing

The ageing population means hearing loss will dramatically increase. Applications addressing hearing health in older adults — including connection to dementia risk — are increasingly relevant.

Combined with education

In Indigenous communities, hearing loss and educational outcomes are directly connected. Applications that link ear health to school attendance and learning outcomes demonstrate integrated understanding.


Tahua's grants management platform supports hearing health funders and Deaf community organisations — with client tracking, hearing outcome data, programme reach measurement, and the reporting tools that help hearing health funders demonstrate their investment in access and inclusion for Deaf and hard of hearing Australians.

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