Early Intervention Crucial for Kids with Hearing Loss
June 2009
Editor: Universal Newborn Hearing Screening has been adopted in much of
the US. When followed up with appropriate intervention, it is really
making a difference in ensuring that children with hearing loss develop
age-appropriate language skills. Here's a press release about the program
in Cincinnati.
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Children enrolled before they are six months old in a home-based
program that teaches language skills to the deaf or hard of hearing are
not only able to achieve appropriate language skills but also to maintain
them over time, according to a new study.
The study underscores the importance of appropriate follow-up of
newborn hearing screens that determine whether a more detailed evaluation
of a baby's hearing by an audiologist is needed, according to Jareen
Meinzen-Derr, PhD, a researcher at Cincinnati Children's Hospital Medical
Center and the study's main author.
Dr. Meinzen-Derr will present her study May 4 at the annual meeting of
the Pediatric Academic Societies in Baltimore.
The researchers studied 328 children enrolled in Ohio's universal
newborn hearing screening program. As is the case in many states, all
infants born in Ohio hospitals or birthing centers receive hearing
screenings before discharge. These screenings determine whether a more
detailed evaluation of a baby's hearing is needed.
Newborns enrolled before 6 months of age were more likely to have age
appropriate language skills than children enrolled at or after 6 months,
the study found. They also maintained age appropriate skills through the
age of 3 - the age at which early intervention services cease. Children
enrolled at or after six months had lower baseline language skills but
made significant language progress, possibly catching up to the group
enrolled at an earlier age, irrespective of severity of hearing loss,
according to Dr. Meinzen-Derr. The researchers did not study children past
the age of three to determine the level of their language skills.
"It is important for pediatricians and family physicians to ensure that
families follow up on initial screenings that indicate a possible problem
with a more thorough evaluation," says Susan Wiley, MD, a developmental
pediatrician at Cincinnati Children's and a co-author of the study.
"Early intervention can and does have a great impact. We need to
preserve early intervention services during these difficult economic
times."
Approximately 150,000 children are born in Ohio each year. About 6,000
of them do not pass their newborn hearing screening. Ohio infants who are
identified with a permanent hearing loss are eligible for home-based
language education, assistance with audiology follow-up appointments,
connections to community resources, planning for transition to preschool
and other services - all at no cost to families. The Regional Infant
Hearing Programs in Ohio are funded by the Ohio Department of Health.
The PAS meeting, sponsored by the American Academy of Pediatrics, the
American Pediatric Society, the Society for Pediatric Research and the
Ambulatory Pediatric Association, is the largest international meeting to
focus on research in child health.