Abstract

The effect of three common hearing impairment criteria on the prevalence of hearing loss was evaluated in 58 prospectively followed-up 5-year-old children born preterm at < or = 32 weeks of gestation. Audiological assessment was done as part of an extensive neurodevelopmental evaluation at the age of 5 years. With the criterion based on the classification of the World Health Organization (average threshold hearing level > 25 dB at frequencies of 0.5, 1 and 2 kHz, classified according to the less impaired side) there were two preterm children with mild hearing impairment. With Clark's criterion (unilateral average threshold hearing level > 15 dB at frequencies of 0.5, 1 and 2 kHz) eight children had slight hearing impairment; seven of these had conductive hearing problems. With the criterion of a single frequency-specific deficit > 15 dB for 0.25-4 kHz the number of hearing-impaired children was 28 out of 54 (51.9%), most of whom had conductive or unspecified hearing deficits. Moreover, of the four multiply handicapped, retarded children whose pure tone thresholds were not assessed monaurally, three would belong to the hearing-impaired group according to Clark's criterion and four according to the frequency-specific criterion.

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