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Canadians may never get to use AirPods Pro 2 as hearing aids

Despite Health Canada approving AirPods Pro 2 as hearing aids, Canadians are still unable to use feature because of still further regulatory hurdles which look unlikely to be cleared.

Apple updated AirPods Pro 2 to act as both a hearing test and hearing aids for US users in October 2024, and it's been rolling out to other countries since. But despite approval by Health Canada, the country's federal department for health services, the feature is still not available.

According to local CTV News, Canadians are complaining that they have specifically bought AirPods Pro 2 because of the Health Canada approval and feel cheated without it.

"I kind of felt like I got ripped off," Art Jackes of Oakville said. "I think it's sinful to hold it back. It's an accessibility issue. Everyone needs all the advantages they can get."

It's not as simple as Apple just willing it into being, however. As with just about anything Apple does, the regulatory climate poses issues.

A spokesperson for Ontario's Ministry of Health said that prescribing hearing aids is restricted to licensed audiologists and physicians. "Should the AirPods Pro 2 be sold in Ontario as a hearing aid," said the spokesperson, "it would need to be done in accordance with the requirements [of the Regulated Health Professions Act, 1991]."

It doesn't appear, then, that Canada is going to allow Apple to enable its AirPods Pro 2 hearing aid feature without regulations being substantially revised.

Apple's AirPods Pro 2 hearing features are now available in over 100 countries, but Canada is not the only one to continue having regulatory issues. Across Europe, the feature is still not universally available, and in cases such as France, only certain elements have been approved and enabled.

This isn't the first time that Health Canada's approval has not immediately led to Apple enabling a device feature. In 2019, the Canadian department approved the ECG feature of the Apple Watch and said subsequent delays were down to Apple, not them.

Where available, the hearing features of the AirPods Pro 2 start with a test. Depending on the results, users may be recommended to see a professional, but the AirPods Pro will also alter their output to accommodate an individual's particular hearing loss.

9 Comments

DAalseth 7 Years · 3207 comments

A spokesperson for Ontario's Ministry of Health said that prescribing hearing aids is restricted to licensed audiologists and physicians. "Should the AirPods Pro 2 be sold in Ontario as a hearing aid 
it would need to be done in accordance with the requirements [of the Regulated Health Professions Act, 1991]

Ontario is not all of Canada. Why if Ontario objects, couldn’t I still get a set with the feature in British Columbia. 

3 Likes · 0 Dislikes
bobf4321 18 Years · 6 comments

Maybe Apple could sell them as “hearing accessories” instead of “hearing aids”?
The whole thing is rather silly.

4 Likes · 0 Dislikes
danox 12 Years · 3605 comments

Apple should keep on Iterating in this area….More importantly keep up the work of researching and filing those patents in this area, this is more important long-term because the medical patent trolls are everywhere.

1 Like · 1 Dislike
mknelson 10 Years · 1158 comments

DAalseth said:
A spokesperson for Ontario's Ministry of Health said that prescribing hearing aids is restricted to licensed audiologists and physicians. "Should the AirPods Pro 2 be sold in Ontario as a hearing aid it would need to be done in accordance with the requirements [of the Regulated Health Professions Act, 1991]

Ontario is not all of Canada. Why if Ontario objects, couldn’t I still get a set with the feature in British Columbia. 

It's a firmware update to existing Airpod Pro 2. Apple would need to come up with a mechanism to break it down by province.

1 Like · 0 Dislikes
titantiger 15 Years · 300 comments

I don't understand why Apple can't just enable everything like the US has (but perhaps have the features off by default up there with the user able to go in and enable them), but just label it something else.  Let the user decide.  Just don't call it a hearing aid or advertise it as such.

3 Likes · 0 Dislikes