At NeuroBalance Integrated Health Foundation Ltd, we support adults (18+) living with hearing loss, deafness, and communication and sensory-access needs. Communication barriers can be as excluding as physical barriers — at work, in education, and in everyday life. That’s why we promote practical solutions that improve access, safety, and comfort, without shame or “just cope with it” attitudes.



Common Challenges 

 

fatigue and overload from constantly trying to keep up

difficulty understanding speech in noise, groups, on the phone, or online

stress and uncertainty in social situations (“What did they say?”)

workplace barriers: meetings, training, briefings, recruitment

reduced access to information (no captions, unclear instructions, fast speech)

feeling excluded when environments are not designed for access



How We Help 

 

Communication Access — Small Changes, Big Impact 

We support practical communication setups that make conversations possible:

hearing-friendly meeting practices (one speaker at a time, clear pace, repeats)

online meeting standards (captions, chat, agendas, summaries)

simple accessibility habits: written follow-ups, structured notes, clear next steps

 

Work & Education Support 

We help people navigate environments that are often not designed for access:

strategies for meetings, training sessions, and key conversations

planning the best conditions: seating, lighting, distance, noise levels

guidance on requesting reasonable adjustments clearly and confidently

accessible formats: captions, transcripts, plain-language instructions

 

Sensory Accessibility & Overload 

For many people, access is also about sensory load:

identifying sensory triggers and creating reduction plans

pacing, breaks, and recovery plans to prevent shutdown

communicating needs in a practical, non-confrontational way

 

Education & Awareness 

Access improves when environments change:

how to support people with hearing loss/deafness respectfully

inclusive, clear communication principles

designing events and materials that are genuinely accessible



Our Accessibility Standards

We aim for support that is:

clear (plain language, strong structure)

predictable (agenda, goals, summaries)

accessible (captions/transcripts where possible)

flexible (multiple ways to participate)

respectful of different needs (no judgement, no pressure)



Who It’s For

Adults (18+) who:

live with hearing loss or deafness,

experience communication barriers at work/education,

deal with sensory overload and need accessible solutions,

want to participate socially and professionally without constant guessing.



Get in touch or check our updates — we’ll share workshops, resources, and accessibility guidance.