About UCSF EARS
About · UCSF EARS

About UCSF EARS

EARS is a public set of tools and guides designed to help people take the next best step with hearing difficulty, tinnitus, hearing technology, and navigating care. We focus on clarity, safety, and transparency—so you can understand what you’re reading and what to do next.

Updated December 2025 Safety-first, educational (not medical advice) Transparent review labels

Start here

Most people get the fastest results by starting with one short tool, then following the recommended next steps.

What EARS is (and what it isn’t)

Practical

Short tools and guides designed to help you decide what to do next—without overwhelming you with options.

Evidence-informed

We prioritize reputable medical sources and guidelines, and we revise content as evidence changes.

Safety-first

When symptoms can be urgent, we say so clearly and route you to appropriate care.

Important boundary

EARS is educational and does not diagnose or replace clinical care. If you think you may be having an emergency, call 911 or seek emergency care.

How to use EARS

  1. Start with a tool (often the Survey) to identify your most relevant next steps.
  2. Follow the links to targeted guides, strategies, or additional tools.
  3. Bring what you learned to your appointment: symptoms, priorities, and questions.

Trust and transparency

The simple version

We publish helpful content as soon as it meets baseline safety and clarity standards, then we label it so you can see what level of review it has.

Source (usually English) review status:

AI Draft Clinician-edited Clinically reviewed

Translation status (only on non-English pages):

Translation available Translation verified

What the labels mean (canonical)

  • AI Draft AI-assisted draft that has not yet had clinician editing. Useful for orientation, but not a substitute for clinical advice. More about AI Draft.
  • Clinician-edited First pass by one clinician. Edited by a clinician for clarity, safety framing (“when to get checked”), and consistent routing across EARS.
  • Clinically reviewed Second pass by review team. An additional clinician has reviewed for medical accuracy and safety framing. This is the “English/source finalized” state, but pages can still be updated as science and best practices evolve.
  • Translation available A non-English version exists but has not yet been verified by a professional translator/medical interpreter. It may be AI-assisted and should be treated as a helpful draft until verified.
  • Translation verified This language version has been reviewed by a professional translator/medical interpreter for meaning, tone, and medical terms.

How to read labels on translated pages

Review labels describe the source (usually English) review status. On non-English pages, look for Translation verified when a human translator has verified that specific language page. If a non-English page does not show it, that language version may still be an AI-assisted translation pending verification.

How content moves (high-level)

  1. Draft (sometimes AI-assisted)
  2. Clinician edit for clarity, safety framing, and routing
  3. Additional clinician review when the topic is higher-stakes
  4. Translation + verification when available
  5. Maintenance as evidence changes and feedback reveals confusion

Safety is always routed

Regardless of label, urgent symptom routing stays consistent across EARS. For hearing/tinnitus/balance red flags, use /en/emergency.

More about standards and process

This site will keep growing

As EARS expands, we aim to keep navigation simple and content consistent. If a page feels confusing or missing key context, your feedback helps improve it.

Connected initiative

EARS also connects to broader hearing health efforts. One example: UC HEARS — a UC-wide initiative in development.

Contact

Questions or corrections: [email protected]

Medical disclaimer

EARS is educational and does not provide diagnosis or treatment. If you think you may be having an emergency, call 911 or seek emergency care.