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Warrington North

Helen Jones
Press Releases

Take RNID's Telephone Hearing Check Urges Local MP

Warrington North MP HELEN JONES is urging people to take the RNID telephone hearing check and to join the 180,000 people who have already made the call. The MP voiced her support for RNID’s ‘Breaking the Sound Barrier’ campaign, which is reaching out to the 4 million people in the UK who are losing their hearing but doing nothing about it.


The specially developed five minute telephone hearing check, available by dialling 0845 600 55 55,  is part of the new ‘Breaking the Sound Barrier’ campaign by RNID, the UK’s largest charity for deaf and hard of hearing people.


Expressing her support for the campaign,  which aims to change attitudes towards hearing loss and hearing loss and hearing aids.  HELEN JONES said:

“Most people don’t realise how important their hearing is until they start to lose it. I urge concerned people in Warrington to take RNID’s telephone hearing check. Hearing loss can lead to stress and difficulties in communicating, both at home and at work.  Yet digital hearing technology can transform lives for the better and reconnect people back into society."

RNID’s Chief Executive Dr john Low explains:

“ It’s great that Helen Jones is urging her constituents to take RNID’s telephone hearing check.

By the time we reach 50, over 40% of us will experience some level of hearing loss, which happens naturally as we get older. But it can have a profound impact on our lives, leaving many of us feeling isolated. 

The hearing check will take just five minutes,  putting you back in touch with friends, family and colleagues."

Recent Ipsos MORI research shows almost half of adults believe that embarrassment about not being able to hear prevents people with hearing difficulties discussing their problem with others, or having a hearing test.


RNID has been pursuing a long-term campaign to improve quality, access and take-up of effective hearing aids, and currently over half a million people have benefited from digital hearing aids available free on the NHS. 

Breaking the Sound Barrier aims to build on this success, informing and persuading people to take action to address their hearing loss,  not only for their own benefit, but for that of their family and friends, colleagues, and society at large.

RNID developed the telephone hearing check, which features TV personality Eamonn Holmes and has been validated by audiology expert Professor Mark Lutman of Southampton University supported by specialists in Manchester, London, Birmingham, Nottingham and Bristol. Other celebrities backing the campaign include Sir Cliff Richard, Eric Sykes,  Claire Rayner, Alan Titchmarsh and popular historian David Starkey.