Abstract

Objectives:This study aimed to examine whether (a) exposure to universal newborn hearing screening (UNHS) and b) early confirmation of hearing loss were associated with benefits to expressive and receptive language outcomes in the teenage years for a cohort of spoken language users. It also aimed to determine whether either of these two variables was associated with benefits to relative language gain from middle childhood to adolescence within this cohort.Design:The participants were drawn from a prospective cohort study of a population sample of children with bilateral permanent childhood hearing loss, who varied in their exposure to UNHS and who had previously had their language skills assessed at 6–10 years. Sixty deaf or hard of hearing teenagers who were spoken language users and a comparison group of 38 teenagers with normal hearing completed standardized measures of their receptive and expressive language ability at 13–19 years.Results:Teenagers exposed to UNHS did not show significantly better expressive (adjusted mean difference, 0.40; 95% confidence interval [CI], −0.26 to 1.05; d = 0.32) or receptive (adjusted mean difference, 0.68; 95% CI, −0.56 to 1.93; d = 0.28) language skills than those who were not. Those who had their hearing loss confirmed by 9 months of age did not show significantly better expressive (adjusted mean difference, 0.43; 95% CI, −0.20 to 1.05; d = 0.35) or receptive (adjusted mean difference, 0.95; 95% CI, −0.22 to 2.11; d = 0.42) language skills than those who had it confirmed later. In all cases, effect sizes were of small size and in favor of those exposed to UNHS or confirmed by 9 months. Subgroup analysis indicated larger beneficial effects of early confirmation for those deaf or hard of hearing teenagers without cochlear implants (N = 48; 80% of the sample), and these benefits were significant in the case of receptive language outcomes (adjusted mean difference, 1.55; 95% CI, 0.38 to 2.71; d = 0.78). Exposure to UNHS did not account for significant unique variance in any of the three language scores at 13–19 years beyond that accounted for by existing language scores at 6–10 years. Early confirmation accounted for significant unique variance in the expressive language information score at 13–19 years after adjusting for the corresponding score at 6–10 years (R2 change = 0.08, p = 0.03).Conclusions:This study found that while adolescent language scores were higher for deaf or hard of hearing teenagers exposed to UNHS and those who had their hearing loss confirmed by 9 months, these group differences were not significant within the whole sample. There was some evidence of a beneficial effect of early confirmation of hearing loss on relative expressive language gain from childhood to adolescence. Further examination of the effect of these variables on adolescent language outcomes in other cohorts would be valuable.

Highlights

  • 1 in 1000 babies is born with bilateral permanent childhood hearing loss (PCHL) of at least moderate severity (>40 dB HL) (Davis et al 1997)

  • To examine whether the patterns of language deficits shown by the deaf or hard of hearing (D/HH) group in this study were a function of the normal hearing (NH) reference group used, we examined standard scores on the receptive and expressive language measures to assess their performance relative to the larger hearing samples on which the tests were standardized

  • universal newborn hearing screening (UNHS) and early confirmation were associated with higher language scores but effect sizes were of small size, and the differences between groups were not significant

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Summary

Introduction

1 in 1000 babies is born with bilateral permanent childhood hearing loss (PCHL) of at least moderate severity (>40 dB HL) (Davis et al 1997). The impoverished access to spoken language that is a consequence of childhood hearing loss places many deaf or hard of hearing (D/HH) children at significant risk of delayed language development (Eisenberg 2007; Moeller et al 2007; Luckner & Cooke 2010; Moeller & Tomblin 2015). This, in turn, made it possible for these children to be fitted with hearing devices that facilitate access to spoken language (e.g., hearing aids or cochlear implants [CIs]) very early in life and for their families to enroll in early intervention programs to support their child’s developing speech, language, and communication skills (Meinzen-Derr et al 2011; Kasai et al 2012; Moeller et al, 2013)

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