Nixon had his first cochlear implant in June last year, and the second last October, and his family noticed a huge improvement. Since then, he's made rapid progress, learning to hear and speak at an astounding rate. When he had his last listening skills and speech test, he was only three months behind where a normal child would have been.
Now aged almost 3, Nixon is a busy, happy little boy who has been making "awesome" progress said his mother Elle. He can hear, and is speaking in four or five-word sentences.
"His enunciation is really good. A big part of the cochlear implant was sorting out his receptive language and now 80 per cent of the time he understands what we are telling him if we are telling him clearly."
While Nixon began acquiring speech after his first cochlear implant, Mrs Knight said the second implant allowed him to identify where sound is coming from more easily. Having a second implant also means that if there's a fault with the first one, he can still hear.
"If he only had one [implant] it would have been terrible if his processor was lost or hidden."
Mrs Knight said Nixon loved his implants and didn't like to be without them, even going to sleep with the processors still on. He behaves better because he's not as frustrated as when he couldn't hear, although he's not above a bit of manipulation.
"If I tell him something that he doesn't want to, he will take them off so that he can't hear."
Since Nixon had his implants, the Government has agreed to fund cochlear implants in both ears for children with hearing loss.
Mrs Knight said while the trust no longer had to pay for second implants, the money goes to help families with the additional costs that are not covered by the health system such as aqua accessories to allow the children to swim, extra tuition, and therapy for children with auditory processing disorder.