BIRMINGHAM, ALABAMA - Former Miss America Heather Whitestone McCallum, saying she felt a need to hear her children talk, has undergone surgery that is expected to enable her to detect whispers. <br>
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McCallum, who was the first deaf woman to win the pageant, returned to her Atlanta home Thursday after receiving a cochlear implant in her right ear. <br>
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The Pelham native said she decided to have the operation when her son John, 2, fell in her back yard. <br>
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``I couldn't hear him crying,'' McCallum, now a 29-year-old wife and mother of two, told The Birmingham News. ``Not being there for him really scared me.'' <br>
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A childhood bout with the haemophilus influenza virus and high fever left her with no hearing in her right ear and the ability to discern only low frequencies in her left. <br>
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McCallum said she had been happy using a hearing aid until the birth of her two sons. Although it enabled her to hear sirens and horns and some environmental sounds, she said she could not hear her boys' speech. <br>
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Dr. John Niparko, the surgeon who inserted McCallum's implant Wednesday at Johns Hopkins Medical Center in Baltimore, said her ear will need about six weeks to heal before the device can be activated. <br>
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A tiny computer will be worn at her ear level to translate vibrations into electronic code, Niparko said. The implant will receive signals, then relay information to the hearing nerve. <br>
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McCallum said she hopes her decision to receive the implant raises awareness among deaf people about the opportunities available for improving speech.
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