Abstract

Since the 1 January, 2009, newborn hearing screening (NHS) has been obligatory for every child in Germany. NHS is part of the Pediatrics Directive of the Federal Joint Committee. In this directive, details of the procedures and screening quality to be achieved are given. We evaluate if these quality criteria were met in Bavaria in 2016. The NHS data of children born in 2016 in Bavaria were evaluated for quality criteria, such as screening coverage in screening facilities, screening methods, referral rate (rate of failed tests at discharge) and a child’s age at the diagnosis of a hearing disorder. NHS was documented for 116,776 children born in Bavaria in 2016. In the first step, 78,904 newborns were screened with transient evoked otoacoustic emissions and 37,865 with automated auditory brainstem response. Of these, 9182 (7.8%) failed the first test in one or both ears. A second screening before discharge was performed on 53.3% of the newborns with a refer result in the first test, out of which 58.7% received a pass result. After the screening process, 4.6% of the newborns were discharged with a refer result. Only 18% of the first controls after discharge were performed by a pediatric audiologist. In 37.9% of the newborns, the screening center intervened to assure the control of any failed screening test. The median age of diagnosis for bilateral hearing loss was 5.3 months. In Bavaria, NHS was implemented successfully. A tracking system for all children who failed the hearing screening test is pivotal for early diagnosis and therapy of children with hearing deficiency.

Highlights

  • In Germany, the prevalence of a severe bilateral hearing disorder in infants is about 1–2 out of 1000 children [1,2]

  • We evaluate if the quality parameters from the Pediatrics Directive could be reached in Bavaria in 2016

  • If all children born alive in Bavaria in 2016 were taken into account, including, for example, children living in Baden-Wurttemberg or Thuringia, the rate for newborn hearing screening (NHS) would be 94.9%

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Summary

Introduction

In Germany, the prevalence of a severe bilateral hearing disorder in infants is about 1–2 out of 1000 children [1,2]. Diagnosis and therapy improve speech, language and general development in children with bilateral hearing loss [3,4,5]. A universal newborn hearing screening (NHS) was established in Germany by the Federal Joint Committee (“Gemeinsamer Bundesausschuss”, G-BA) in 2009 [6]. The aim of NHS is to identify newborns with a bilateral hearing disorder at a threshold level of 35 dB hearing level (HL) by the age of three months and to initiate therapy by the age of six months. Children with bilateral hearing loss should be diagnosed before the age of three months and therapy should be initiated at the age of six months

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