Post-natal hearing loss in universal neonatal hearing screening communities: current limitations and future directions.

Nicole Hutt, Christine Rhodes
Author Information
  1. Nicole Hutt: SWISH, Sydney Children's Hospital, Randwick, New South Wales, Australia.

Abstract

Universal hearing screening has dramatically improved outcomes for babies born with detectable hearing abnormalities; yet there are some infants who develop significant hearing problems after passing a neonatal screen. There is much conjecture as to the number and the characteristics of infants with post-natal hearing losses; yet evidence suggests that many children may be affected, and that a large proportion have no discoverable cause. Currently, screening programmes use lists of risk factors to enroll babies into surveillance programmes. This practice is problematic because audiological follow-ups are expensive and under-utilised, and parental disclosure is often inaccurate. The large databases from universal neonatal programmes could inform the development of effective, evidence-based practice and policy for the detection and intervention of children who develop post-natal hearing losses.

MeSH Term

Child
Hearing Loss
Humans
Infant, Newborn
Neonatal Screening
Risk Factors
Time Factors

Word Cloud

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