Population outcomes of three approaches to detection of congenital hearing loss


Autoria(s): Wake, Melissa; Ching, Teresa Y.C.; Wirth, Karen; Poulakis, Zeffie; Mensah, Fiona K.; Gold, Lisa; King, Alison; Bryson, Hannah E.; Reilly, Sheena; Rickards, Field
Data(s)

01/01/2016

Resumo

BACKGROUND: Universal newborn hearing screening was implemented worldwide largely on modeled, not measured, long-term benefits. Comparative quantification of population benefits would justify its high cost. <br /><br />METHODS: Natural experiment comparing 3 population approaches to detecting bilateral congenital hearing loss (>25 dB, better ear) in Australian states with similar demographics and services: (1) universal newborn hearing screening, New South Wales 2003-2005, n = 69; (2) Risk factor screening (neonatal intensive care screening + universal risk factor referral), Victoria 2003-2005, n = 65; and (3) largely opportunistic detection, Victoria 1991-1993, n = 86. Children in (1) and (2) were followed at age 5 to 6 years and in (3) at 7 to 8 years. Outcomes were compared between states using adjusted linear regression. <br /><br />RESULTS: Children were diagnosed younger with universal than risk factor screening (adjusted mean difference -8.0 months, 95% confidence interval -12.3 to -3.7). For children without intellectual disability, moving from opportunistic to risk factor to universal screening incrementally improved age of diagnosis (22.5 vs 16.2 vs 8.1 months, P < .001), receptive (81.8 vs 83.0 vs 88.9, P = .05) and expressive (74.9 vs 80.7 vs 89.3, P < .001) language and receptive vocabulary (79.4 vs 83.8 vs 91.5, P < .001); these nonetheless remained well short of cognition (mean 103.4, SD 15.2). Behavior and health-related quality of life were unaffected. <br /><br />CONCLUSIONS: With new randomized trials unlikely, this may represent the most definitive population-based evidence supporting universal newborn hearing screening. Although outperforming risk factor screening, school entry language still lagged cognitive abilities by nearly a SD. Prompt intervention and efficacy research are needed for children to reach their potential.

Identificador

http://hdl.handle.net/10536/DRO/DU:30080980

Idioma(s)

eng

Publicador

American Academy of Pediatrics

Relação

http://dro.deakin.edu.au/eserv/DU:30080980/gold-populationoutcomes-2016.pdf

http://www.dx.doi.org/10.1542/peds.2015-1722

Direitos

2016, American Academy of Pediatrics

Palavras-Chave #Australia #Child #Child, Preschool #Cost-Benefit Analysis #Female #Hearing Disorders #Humans #Infant #Infant, Newborn #Male #Neonatal Screening #Risk Assessment #Risk Factors #Science & Technology #Life Sciences & Biomedicine #Pediatrics #DIFFICULTIES QUESTIONNAIRE #PSYCHOMETRIC PROPERTIES #COST-EFFECTIVENESS #SCREENING-PROGRAM #LANGUAGE #IMPAIRMENT #CHILDREN #INTERVENTION #STRENGTHS
Tipo

Journal Article