Abstract

Universal Neonatal Hearing Screening (UNHS) has been gradually implemented since the mid-nineties in Austrian maternity wards and neonatal intensive care units. This study evaluated the effect of UNHS on reducing age at identification as well as age of intervention for children with congenital and perinatal sensorineural hearing impairment. This was a retrospective analysis of clinical data of 394 Austrian children diagnosed with an at least mild degree (> 20 dB hearing level) of permanent sensorineural hearing loss. Age at identification and age at intervention were compared between children who underwent UNHS ('with UNHS') and those who did not undergo UNHS ('without UNHS'). The median of age of identification was 37.6 months in children without UNHS, and 3.9 months in children with UNHS. By six months of age, 69% of hearing-impaired children who underwent UNHS, were identified but only 6% of those without UNHS. At one year, the corresponding percentages are 80% and 12%, respectively. In children without UNHS, the degree of hearing loss was the most predictive factor of age at identification (median of age at diagnosis for profound hearing loss: 15 months; severe: 26 months; moderate: 52 months; mild: 73 months). In children with UNHS, age of identification was unrelated to degree of hearing loss (medians between 3.7 and 4.4 months). In the majority of children intervention began within one month after diagnosis, regardless of whether or not the child was identified by UNHS. UNHS greatly increases the proportion of children whose hearing impairment is diagnosed before six months of age. However, in some 20% of children, hearing impairment was diagnosed later than one year of age, despite having failed the screening. Additionally, data from this study suggest that about 15% of childhood hearing losses manifest themselves after the hearing screening period. Efforts are thus required for the early detection of these children as well.

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