Abstract
Aims: The impact of COVID-19 is considerable in patients with hearing impairment who are faced with difficulties in communication due to masks and social distancing. We aimed to provide a preliminary description about difficulties faced by a group of patients due to hearing impairment. We collected data from 300 consecutive patients from a tertiary care urology clinic at Colombo South Teaching Hospital, Sri Lanka. A self-administered questionnaire was used. Chi-Square test was used for statistical analysis. The mean age of the patients was 55.9 (range:11-85). Eight patients (2.7%) had previous known hearing impairment. Repetition of instructions were required at least once due to hearing impairment in 27.3% (once:14.3%; twice:7.0%; three times:3.3%; >three times:2.7%). However, around 81.7% reported that they had no hearing problems while others reported some dif ficulty (18.3%: mild-10.3%, n=31; moderate-4.3%,n=13 and severe-3.7%,n=11). Nine patients (3.0%) required lowering of the mask to enable lip reading in order to understand the instructions and all reported moderate/severe hearing impairment (moderate: n=1, severe: n=8). Patient reported hearing impairment was significantly higher in those aged ≥65 years (31% vs. 11%, p<0.001). Around 18% of our cohort experienced some form of hearing difficulty. Thus, awareness among the healthcare providers and general public should be improved. Further studies on the impact of this problem with special focus on possible solutions are necessary.
Highlights
The COVID-19 pandemic has caused many challenges to the country’s economy and the livelihood and socio-cultural beliefs of general public worldwide and in Sri Lanka [1,2,3]
We aimed to provide a preliminary description about difficulties faced by a group of patients due to hearing impairment
Nine patients (3.0%) required lowering of the mask by the doctor allowing them to lip-read in order to understand the instructions and all of them had moderate to severe hearing impairment; 5 had history of hearing impairment
Summary
The COVID-19 pandemic has caused many challenges to the country’s economy and the livelihood and socio-cultural beliefs of general public worldwide and in Sri Lanka [1,2,3]. The COVID-19 has posed significant impact to health care systems and health care workers altering work pattern and burden [3, 4]. Patients and health care personnel find it difficult to communicate with each other due to wearing masks and social distancing [8]. The difficulties are more among those with hearing impairment and in health care facilities with lot of background noise due to overcrowding. 20% of urban population in Sri Lanka have hearing impairment and of them, 86%
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