Abstract

Objective: Despite the successful implementation of newborn hearing screening (NHS), a debate is emerging as to what should be the best means of enabling timely diagnosis and intervention for preschoolers with educationally significant sensorineural or conductive hearing impairment (HI) missed at the time of NHS or occurred after birth. Our study aims to document the proportion and characteristics of HIs diagnosed in children in need of audiologic assessment, in order to outline the optimization areas of an operational framework for auditory surveillance during preschool age.Method: The referral routes and outcomes of 730 audiological assessments performed in 3 years within the framework of the early hearing identification program in Trieste (Italy) were retrospectively analyzed.Results: Among 570/595 completed evaluations, an HI was diagnosed in 114 children, 73.7% of which presenting an exclusively conductive HI due to middle ear effusion. HIs were found in 36/141 who failed NHS, and 60/385 preschoolers who were referred by the primary care pediatrician's surveillance activity during well-child visits, with diagnostic yield of 25.5 and 15.5%, respectively.Conclusion: Ongoing preschool surveillance in primary care setting integrated into a NHS program is feasible to conduct and may effectively identify HIs that missed NHS or were related with a risk factor. New triage instruments and protocols for immediate audiology referral could allow to obtain the diagnosis of educationally significant conductive and sensorineural HIs ahead of the development concern and in the same way reduce patient mobility, thus optimizing timing efficiency and economic impact of the program.

Highlights

  • Auditory deprivation that follows undetected hearing impairments (HI) is responsible of delays in language competence, academic achievements and social and emotional development [1]

  • All children referred to the Pediatric Audiology Service (PAS) over three sample years (2013, 2015, and 2017) for a full audiological assessment were included in the study

  • The PAS, located at the “Burlo Garofolo” Institute in Trieste (Italy), is the referral center for three hospital-based newborn hearing screening (NHS) and for the postnatal hearing surveillance run by roughly 60 family pediatrician (FP) working in the territory

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Summary

Introduction

Auditory deprivation that follows undetected hearing impairments (HI) is responsible of delays in language competence, academic achievements and social and emotional development [1]. These consequences are well-known for sensorineural and permanent HIs [2]. Modeling Postnatal Hearing Case and language input for young children at their most sensitive age for language acquisition. Even though newborn hearing screening (NHS) has proved to be an effective means to reducing the identification age of congenital HI, delays and loss to follow-up after failed NHS are common [4]

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