U of M Research Shows U.S. Teen Hearing Loss Better than
Reported
October 2010
Research shows hearing loss percentage is much smaller due to limitations
in the precision of hearing tests
New research from University of Minnesota hearing scientists shows that
fewer than 20 percent of teenagers in the United States have a hearing loss
as a result of exposure to loud sounds, thus offering a different analysis
of data reported in the Journal of the American Medical Association (JAMA)
in August.
The U of M's research, forthcoming in the Journal of Speech, Language,
and Hearing Research, points out that the small hearing losses that
audiologist are trying to identify with conventional hearing tests are
subject to measurement error and that as many as 10 percent or more of
children are falsely identified as having a noise induced hearing loss using
these methods.
"Most media have emphasized the link between exposure to loud sounds and
hearing loss when referring to the JAMA study," says Bert Schlauch,
professor in the university's Department of Speech-Language-Hearing
Sciences. "However, many of the findings of the JAMA study are not
consistent with hearing loss caused by exposure to loud sounds." These
conclusions were drawn from an ongoing study of the hearing of the
University of Minnesota Marching Band and a forthcoming paper in the Journal
of Speech, Language and Hearing Research authored by Schlauch and Edward
Carney.
The U of M researchers measured the hearing of members of the
university's marching band and found about 15 percent had hearing loss.
Researchers followed the band members over the period of a year. When the
results of multiple hearing tests were averaged, more than half of the
apparent noise induced hearing losses disappeared, a finding consistent with
measurement error.
The JAMA study examined two sets of data collected as part of a national
study of health and nutrition. Schlauch and Carney examined the older data
set that was included in the JAMA study. A highly cited study, published in
the journal Pediatrics, examined the older data set and reported an
estimated prevalence of 14.9 percent of 12 to 19-year-old children who had
hearing loss consistent with noise exposure.
Schlauch and Carney report, based on computer simulations modeling the
statistical properties of hearing tests, that as much as 10 percent of the
14.9 percent figure is consistent with false positive responses. In other
words, people with normal hearing can produce spurious responses during a
hearing test that look like a mild hearing loss, a result consistent with
measurement error.
"Our findings do not mean that people should not be concerned about
exposure to loud sounds, such as those from personal stereo devices, live
music concerts or gun fire," Schlauch says. "The damage may build up over
time and not appear until a person is older. For all sounds, the risk
increases the more intense the sound and the longer the exposure,
particularly from sustained or continuous sounds."
The paper, "Are False Positive Rates Leading to an Overestimation of
Noise-Induced Hearing Loss," forthcoming in the Journal of Speech, Language,
and Hearing Research, was co-authored by Bert Schlauch and Edward Carney.
Ongoing work is a collaborative effort with Su-Hyun Jin, University of Texas
at Austin, and Bert Schlauch, Peggy Nelson and Edward Carney in the
Department of Speech-Language-Hearing Sciences, College of Liberal Arts,
University of Minnesota.
Source: University of Minnesota