Skills
71 skills are associated with this occupation.
0 skills selected
Essential knowledge
18 skills
Essential skills / competences
42 skills
Optional knowledge
7 skills
Optional skills / competences
4 skills
Explore work as audiologist. This page gives a simple overview of the occupation, useful skills, map context and ways to continue in Job Explorer.
Audiologist work is about assessing, diagnosing and treating hearing and balance disorders in children and adults, including hearing loss, tinnitus, dizziness and auditory processing difficulties.
In job descriptions, look for audiometry, counselling patients on hearing, hearing aids, cochlear implant adjustment, vestibular assessment, clinical audit, patient communication, health records and continuity of care.
Audiologist work combines patient assessment, hearing and balance diagnostics, counselling and follow-up. The setting may be a clinic, hospital service, hearing centre or rehabilitation team. Daily work can include audiometry, hearing-aid decisions, cochlear implant adjustment, vestibular testing, health records and conversations with patients who describe hearing, tinnitus, dizziness or sound sensitivity problems.
Core skills include audiometry, audiology, counselling methods, hearing improvement advice, cochlear implant adjustment, acoustics and empathy with healthcare users. Strong practice also depends on hygiene routines, clinical audit, continuity of care and the ability to explain test results in language patients and relatives can use.
Salary context varies with clinical responsibility, diagnostic scope, patient complexity, implant or vestibular work, supervision and whether the role includes service development or audit. A post focused on routine tests is different from one that owns complex assessments, treatment planning and specialist follow-up. No salary amount is provided here.
Career paths can move from general hearing assessments toward paediatric audiology, implant services, vestibular work, tinnitus care, rehabilitation coordination, clinical quality work or research-linked practice. Progression often depends on reliable test interpretation, patient communication, documentation and the ability to coordinate with doctors, speech therapists and hearing technology suppliers.
When reading vacancies, check whether the work involves adults, children or both, and whether it includes hearing aids, implants, balance assessment or rehabilitation counselling. Useful adverts name the equipment, patient groups, appointment types, documentation expectations and how clinical decisions are reviewed with the wider health team.
This guide is editorial career context. It is not official labour-market statistics or role-specific salary data.
71 skills are associated with this occupation.
0 skills selected
18 skills
42 skills
7 skills
4 skills
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— Jobs total — Countries with jobs
Audiologists and speech therapists (2266)
| ESCO URI | http://data.europa.eu/esco/occupation/c4d6d07a-ae90-40ce-bc5a-c952805a9bf3 |
|---|---|
| ESCO code | 2266.1 |
| ISCO group | 2266 |
| Concept type | Occupation |