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Chime - The National Charity for Deafness and Hearing Loss

Chime, The National Charity for Deafness and Hearing Loss

Who We Are

We provide 1:1 support in the home which is based on your own personal goals as a family. this may include play, routines, language support, emotional support, peer-to-peer support, confidence and self-esteem building and friendship building. We will work with your child and family to understand hearing loss coping mechanisms and support you in developing and achieving your individual goals as a family.

What We Do

Our mission in Chime is to limit the impact of deafness and hearing loss through promoting accessibility, creating supportive communities, and enabling personal choice and community participation. Our vision is a society with no limits or barriers for anyone living with deafness or hearing loss.

How We Do It

We provide the following support to Children and Families; 1:1 support with a Family Support Worker Parenting Courses Local and National events and activities Social Work Support (Emotional support, Newly Diagnosed Support, Rights and Entitlements) Explore Programme (Our mentors will work with you to give you individualised progression plans, career advice and employment support)

Who We Serve

We support Children aged 0-18 and their families all over Ireland.

Quick Reference

Name:
Chime, The National Charity for Deafness and Hearing Loss
Address:
35 North Frederick Street,
Rotunda,
Dublin 1.
D01 W592
018175700
0860140080
Is a Referral Required? Yes
Is there a charge? No

Categories

Socials

Opening & Closing
Monday
09:00
17:00
Tuesday
09:00
17:00
Wednesday
09:00
17:00
Thursday
09:00
17:00
Friday
09:00
17:00
Saturday
Sunday

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Choosing A Strong Password

Chains of words, make passwords easy to remember and harder to crack.

 

To create a password that meets our strength requirements, it’s recommended to use a mix of at least three random words along with a number (not a birthday or 123 etc., just random) and one or more symbols and capitals, but don't capitalize the first letters of the words, e.g.:

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  • table?taPe748goNe.

This password style might not be very common, and it will be much more difficult for computers/bots to crack. It also allows for your passwords to be memorized more easily. Though a password vault may help with that.