Introduction to bone conduction implants
Delivers the gift of hearing. Naturally.
Imagine being able to join in a conversation in a busy restaurant regardless of where you’re sitting. Imagine being free of irritating feedback and distortion from in-the-ear hearing aids and ear moulds. Imagine being able to hear sounds from both sides, even though only one of your ears is working.
Imagine your child hearing well at school without being exhausted from the effort of listening.
Imagine hearing a clear, natural sound the way nature intended.

Our Cochlear™ Baha® hearing solution can help make it happen.
Who can Baha bone conduction implants help?
The Cochlear Baha system is a simple and effective hearing solution for adults and children with:
- conductive hearing loss (outer or middle ear problems)
- mixed hearing loss (both outer/middle and inner ear problems)
- single-sided deafness (total deafness in one ear)
How Baha helps you hear
Baha bone conduction implants use your body's natural ability to send sound through the bone directly to the hearing part of your ear. So if there is something wrong with your outer or middle ear, Baha simply bypasses these problems.
Uses your natural hearing
- Baha uses bone conduction - one of the natural ways we hear sound.
Produces the sound clarity of bone conduction
- Because sound waves are re-directed through bone and around hearing roadblocks, you hear cleaner and clearer sound.
- 89% of users prefer Baha when compared to standard hearing aids1.
Gives you the right comfort level
- With Baha, you no longer have to worry about distortion, feedback or uncomfortable ear moulds. Baha offers a comfortable and discreet hearing solution for people of all ages.
- 90% of Baha users would recommend Baha to someone else with the same type of hearing loss2
1Hol MK, Sink AF, Mylanus EA, Cremers CW. Long-term results of bone-anchored hearing aid recipients who had previously used air conduction hearing aids.
2Kunst SJW, Hol MKS, Snik AFM, Bosman AJ, Mylanus EAM, Cremers CWRJ. Baha in patients with acquired and congenital unilateral inner ear deafness, 2007. Otol Neurotol. 2007
