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Volume Control Telephone Symbol Sign - Raised Letters and Braille

ADA Compliant Hearing Impaired Telephone Sign - 6" x 8"

  • $69.95 $69.95
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Color
White on Blue
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White on Blue Ships in 3-5 Business Days

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ADA Volume Control Telephone Sign with Tactile Phone Symbol and Text and Grade 2 Braille - 6" x 8"

Use this ADA Telephone Sign to mark telephones equipped with volume control hearing technologies such as TTY, text telephone, voice carry-over telephone, or captioned telephones. Communication is at the heart of safety. 

ADA Telephone Sign - Tactile Sign with Braille

  • ADA compliant non-glare matte finish
  • ADA compliant font and tactile (1/32 inch raised) letters
  • ADA compliant size and letter height
  • ADA compliant California domed Grade 2 Braille (The use of California standards for braille satisfies both Federal and California regulations, allowing a single dot configuration for all braille signs nationwide.)
  • Our high-quality yet economically priced ADA Hearing Assistive Telephone Signs are guaranteed to pass inspections performed by California Certified Access Specialists--or your money back.

Information on Phones for the Hearing Impaired, Hard of Hearing, and Deaf

Between 2000 and 2004, estimates of the number of people in the United States with a self-described "hearing difficulty" ranged from 28.6 million to 31.5 million. The number of individuals with hearing difficulty is expected to rise rapidly as the baby-boomer generation reaches and passes age 65.

As compared to other age groups, the percentage of individuals with hearing difficulty is greatest among those individuals age 65 and above. A "hearing difficulty" can refer to the effects of many different hearing impairments of varying degrees. The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) refer to hearing impairments as conditions that affect the frequency and/or intensity of one's hearing. Although the term "deaf" is often mistakenly used to refer to all individuals with hearing difficulties, it actually describes a more limited group.

According to the CDC, "deaf" individuals do not hear well enough to rely on their hearing to process speech and language. Individuals with mild to moderate hearing impairments may be "hard of hearing," but are not "deaf." These individuals differ from deaf individuals in that they use their hearing to assist in communication with others. People who are deaf and those who are hard of hearing can be individuals with disabilities within the meaning of the ADA.




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