Hey @tricias: Is this Dr. Neil Bauman? (who is not an MD, by the way. He is a PhD). He has the Center for Hearing Loss Help. It appears to be a web site, not an actual center, where Bauman posts his articles and sells products. One product is his book that lists ototoxic drugs. I have seen the list; it appears to include every drug where the FDA received a patient report of having "ringing of the ears" following taking the medication. In many cases, we are talking less than 1 percent of hundreds of thousands of people taking this drug ever having this effect. And there is no way to prove that the ringing reported by patients came from a drug or something else, like noise exposure, because no in-depth data is gathered in these reports.
This is just my opinion: I think Bauman's list unreasonably scares people. However, I do not have detailed information about Dr. Bauman, and am not implying he is not qualified or insincere. Maybe someone here at TT can tell us more.
Also, even if you do need to take a medication for a few weeks that might cause ear ringing, those symptoms should stop when you stop taking the drug.
However, ototoxicity is very real, and I am not suggesting otherwise. People indeed can get tinnitus from the drugs they take, especially if those drugs are taken long-term. So if you are given a medication, I would have a long talk with both your pharmacist and your doctors before taking it, rather than consult Dr. Google. You also can go to fda.gov and find what side effects have been reported for all drugs (in the US, that is) and the prevalence rate.