As many tinnitus sufferers like myself know, the never-ending ringing in your ears can become unbearable at times. Sometimes white noise can help by making it harder to distinguish the ringing from other sounds. I know I’ve run fans in my bedroom while falling asleep to help distract me, for example.

You can use the iPhone’s Background Sounds feature to generate this noise for you. And with Airpods Pro, you can deliver the sound directly to a single ear and let external sounds in so you can still hear what’s going on around you.

Here’s how you do it.

  1. On your iPhone, go to Settings > Accessibility > Audio/Visual > Background Sounds
  2. Turn on Background Sounds
  3. Select the sound you want to hear. I like balanced noise for tinnitus relief.
  4. Insert your Airpods Pro to get them to connect to your phone.
  5. Activate transparency mode on the Airpods Pro to let environmental sounds through.

The background sounds will play continuously, but will be suspended for announcements from Siri and phone calls. Interestingly, background sounds are just reduced in volume by about 90% when you start playing Apple Music. There’s a setting in the Background Sounds pane that will disable the background noise while media is playing. Otherwise it will continue playing but will be reduced in volume. Background sounds resume normally after stopping any of those activities.

    • ebits21@lemmy.ca
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      2 years ago

      While they’re nice tones, I wouldn’t buy them just for masking tinnitus.

      Hearing aids are expensive yes, but I’d only buy them to be hearing aids. The masking is a nice bonus feature.

      Most research has found almost any sound can be an effective tinnitus masker. A lot of people that are bothered by tinnitus also have anxiety disorders and the calming tones are likely helping in other ways, like helping those people relax.

      I fit hearing aids all day. Very rarely use the masker settings.

      • LordOfTheChia@lemmy.world
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        2 years ago

        Of course it varies by tinitus sufferer.

        I absolutely would not recommend dropping $7000 on a pair of hearing aides just for masking. That said, I’ve found that the fractal tones and nature sounds (not from the hearing aides) with various levels of sounds help me where simple white noise wouldn’t.

        My T can be masked by white noise but in the 85-90dBm range. It’s also complicated with the fact that it’s only in one ear.

        Until I discovered the right nature sounds track to help me sleep, I was barely getting 3-4 hours of sleep a night.

    • RotaryKeyboard@lemmy.ninjaOP
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      2 years ago

      This is a great idea! I just added it, but it’s tricky. For anyone coming across this who wonders how it’s done, here are the steps:

      1. Go to Settings > Control Center
      2. Scroll down to Accessibility Shortcuts and tap the green + on the left to add it to the included controls
      3. Go to Settings > Accessibility > Accessibility Shortcut (all the way at the bottom in the General group)
      4. Tap Background Sounds. A checkmark will appear on the left.

      Now there will be a generic accessibility icon on the control center that will toggle the background sounds on and off.

      • Rinesi@sh.itjust.works
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        2 years ago

        There is a much easier way, go to settings, then control center, add Hearing. Then just long press the hearing icon in control center ;)

    • Ataraxia@lemmy.world
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      2 years ago

      For me nonsense sounds make it so much louder. Your brain can’t make sense of static, white brown grey whatever noise so it definitely can make it worse.

  • Vilian@lemmy.ca
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    2 years ago

    so you can use any headphone with any cellphone, and any background noise, or any sound in general, not so apple enthusiastic