Universal newborn hearing screening: A question of evidence
Authors:
A. Durieux-Smith ab;
E. Fitzpatrick ab;
J. Whittingham b
| Affiliations: | a Faculty of Health Sciences, University of Ottawa, Canada |
| b Children's Hospital of Eastern Ontario Research Institute, Canada |
DOI:
10.1080/14992020701703547
Publication Frequency:
11 issues per year
Subjects:
Audiology;
Rehabilitation Medicine;
Formats available:
HTML
(English)
:
PDF
(English)
Languages:
English;
Espa
ol
ol
Previously published as:
Audiology
(0020-6091)
until 31 December 2001
Previously published as:
International Audiology
(0538-4915)
until 1971
Also incorporating: Scandinavian Audiology
Also incorporating: British Journal of Audiology
View Article:
View Article (PDF)
in English
View Article (HTML)
in English
Abstract
The objective of this paper is to present data on the ages of diagnosis and hearing-aid fitting of children with permanent congenital or early-onset hearing loss who were identified through neonatal hearing screening (NHS) programs or medical referral. Data were collected for 709 children born between 1980 and 2003. Children who were screened were diagnosed significantly earlier (mean 6.3 months) than referred children (mean 39.5 months). For the referred children, the ages of diagnosis and amplification improved over time but remained unacceptably high. In addition, there was an inverse relationship between degree of loss and age of diagnosis, with children with lesser degrees of hearing loss identified later than those with severe to profound hearing loss. These results contribute to the evidence that NHS programs lower the ages of diagnosis and amplification and lead to earlier improved hearing. It is argued that early access to hearing should be the desired primary outcome of NHS. The numerous studies demonstrating improved ages of diagnosis resulting from NHS programs constitute adequate evidence to support these initiatives.
|
| Keywords: Congenital hearing loss; Neonatal screening; Hearing disorders (diagnosis, epidemiology, etiology) |
| view references (64) |


Download Citation


CiteULike
Del.icio.us
BibSonomy
Connotea