The Presbyterian Ear Institute: Making a Loud Impact

ALBUQUERQUE, NEW MEXICO – In the heart of central Albuquerque, not far from Milne Stadium and Presbyterian Hospital, sits the Presbyterian Ear Institute: a small building that made a huge impact on a local girl’s family, education, and life. Jazzmyne Castillo is 17 years old, speaks clear, fluent English, and is deaf.   When she […]

ALBUQUERQUE, NEW MEXICO – In the heart of central Albuquerque, not far from Milne Stadium and Presbyterian Hospital, sits the Presbyterian Ear Institute: a small building that made a huge impact on a local girl’s family, education, and life.

Jazzmyne Castillo is 17 years old, speaks clear, fluent English, and is deaf.  

When she was first born, Jazzmyne failed the hearing screening 3 times and was sent to the Presbyterian Ear Institute for a final test. Patricia Zuniga, her mother, who I spoke to over the phone a few days before Thanksgiving, has been waiting for an opportunity to shout out this institution that made such a positive impact on her daughter’s life.

During our conversation, Patricia emphasized the impression PEI had on her right from the get-go. She recalled a specific memory from an initial tour she was given, and the moment she decided she wanted her daughter to attend the school. Upon walking into a classroom, she saw three little girls. “It was amazing,” she said. “They were around 9-years old I think, just singing and dancing. I thought, I want that for my daughter.”

The Ear Institute

Located in central Albuquerque near the Presbyterian Hospital, the Ear Institute is a non-profit provider of a range of hearing healthcare services, including hearing aids, cochlear implants, and a speech and language program, according to their website.

What is so unique about PEI is their speech and language program. There are other education opportunities for deaf and hearing-impaired youth, such as the New Mexico School for the Deaf, but they focus primarily on the learning of sign language. “Not a lot of people know sign language,” said Patricia. Giving her child the opportunity to learn to speak, rather than challenging her with ASL, a limited way to communicate to others, was hugely important to her as a mother.

When Jazzmyne was a year old, she received a cochlear implant, and 3 days after that, Patricia and her daughter returned to PEI.

Jazzmyne attended the school at Presbyterian Ear Institute from the age of 1 until she was 5-and-a-half years old. In that time, she received speech therapy, learning how to talk clearly and fluently.

“Most people don’t even know she’s deaf,” her mother told me. “She learned so much from there.” PEI did so well with Jazzmyne in their program, and both her and Patricia are eternally grateful.

The Presbyterian Ear Institute was founded in 1987 as a pediatric cochlear implant program and expanded to include the Oral School in 1990. They are the only school in New Mexico that teaches deaf and hearing-impaired children to learn and use spoken language.

For corrections, news tips, and any other content requests, please send us an email at [email protected].

Hot this week

NMHU To Go Cashless for Student Account Payments, Transition Starts on July 1

Beginning this July, New Mexico Highlands University will adopt a cashless payment system to streamline student account transactions.

How Reinvention and Self-Improvement Shaped UNM Alum Carol Cochran’s Career

Carol Cochran shares how a simple principle guided her career journey from accounting to law.

Interstate 40 Reopens After Fatal SUV Crash Closes Eastbound Lanes

A car crash incident at Eubank has caused closure in the eastbound lane, but it has been reopened. The crash had one casualty.

Another Wildfire Ignites Near Clines Corners as Deer Canyon Fire Evacuations Continue

After the Deer Canyon Fire over the weekend, two fires started at the same time: one is already contained, while the other isn't yet.

Pentagon Unveils Next-Generation Laser Weapons They’re Using to Melt Drone Swarms Out of the Sky

The Pentagon staged a rare live demonstration of high-energy laser and microwave weapons for Defense Secretary Pete Hegseth, underscoring an accelerated effort to transform decades of directed-energy research into operational defenses against drone swarms and other low-cost aerial threats. Officials hope advances in power, manufacturing and integration will reshape modern air warfare.

Topics

NMHU To Go Cashless for Student Account Payments, Transition Starts on July 1

Beginning this July, New Mexico Highlands University will adopt a cashless payment system to streamline student account transactions.

How Reinvention and Self-Improvement Shaped UNM Alum Carol Cochran’s Career

Carol Cochran shares how a simple principle guided her career journey from accounting to law.

Interstate 40 Reopens After Fatal SUV Crash Closes Eastbound Lanes

A car crash incident at Eubank has caused closure in the eastbound lane, but it has been reopened. The crash had one casualty.

Another Wildfire Ignites Near Clines Corners as Deer Canyon Fire Evacuations Continue

After the Deer Canyon Fire over the weekend, two fires started at the same time: one is already contained, while the other isn't yet.

Pentagon Unveils Next-Generation Laser Weapons They’re Using to Melt Drone Swarms Out of the Sky

The Pentagon staged a rare live demonstration of high-energy laser and microwave weapons for Defense Secretary Pete Hegseth, underscoring an accelerated effort to transform decades of directed-energy research into operational defenses against drone swarms and other low-cost aerial threats. Officials hope advances in power, manufacturing and integration will reshape modern air warfare.

From Atomic Bombs to AI Data Center Era: Can New Mexico’s Giant Data Centers Save a Struggling State — or Drain It Dry

From the atomic age to the AI era, New Mexico stands at a crossroads. As Project Jupiter promises billions in investment and high-wage jobs, residents wonder whether the gleaming server farms will finally deliver lasting prosperity or repeat the state’s history of volatile booms and resource strain.

Lobo Louie Levels Up. UNM Mascot Joins the Gaming Arena.

Lobo Louie, the University of New Mexico's beloved mascot, will appear as a playable character in an upcoming video game. University officials and fans say the addition brings national attention to the school while offering a new way to celebrate Lobos pride.

Dangerously Hot: A Broken Air-Conditioning System Turns Senior Center Gym Into a Heat Hazard.

An Albuquerque multigenerational center is dealing with air conditioning problems amid summer heat, prompting concerns among visitors and staff. City officials say repairs are underway as crews work to restore full cooling capacity and maintain safe conditions inside the facility.

Related Articles