Self-reported outcomes of aural rehabilitation for adult hearing aid users in a developing South African context

Hearing impairment has far reaching consequences for affected individuals, in terms of quality of life indicators. In a developing South African context the hearing impaired population is faced with limited aural rehabilitation services. This study evaluated self-reported outcomes of aural rehabilit...

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Main Authors: Elaine Pienaar, Natalie Stearn, De Wet Swanepoel
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: AOSIS 2010-12-01
Series:South African Journal of Communication Disorders
Subjects:
Online Access:https://sajcd.org.za/index.php/sajcd/article/view/44
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spelling doaj-04a5ce8bd46a469686b8325cca7596e12020-11-24T22:18:50ZengAOSISSouth African Journal of Communication Disorders0379-80462225-47652010-12-0157110.4102/sajcd.v57i1.4444Self-reported outcomes of aural rehabilitation for adult hearing aid users in a developing South African contextElaine Pienaar0Natalie Stearn1De Wet Swanepoel2Department of Communication Pathology, University of PretoriaDepartment of Communication Pathology, University of PretoriaDepartment of Communication Pathology, University of Pretoria; Callier Center for Communication Disorders, University of Texas, Dallas, United StatesHearing impairment has far reaching consequences for affected individuals, in terms of quality of life indicators. In a developing South African context the hearing impaired population is faced with limited aural rehabilitation services. This study evaluated self-reported outcomes of aural rehabilitation in a group of adults in the public healthcare sector with a standardized outcomes measurement tool (IOI-HA). Sixty-one respondents participated (44% males; 56% females), with a mean age of 69.7 years. Results revealed that the majority of respondents experienced favourable outcomes in all domains of the inventory comprising of: daily use of hearing aids, benefits provided by hearing aids, residual activity limitation, satisfaction with hearing aids, residual participation restriction, impact of hearing difficulties on others, and changes in quality of life. Statistically significant relationships were obtained between the daily use of hearing aids, the degree of hearing loss, and the type of hearing aids fitted, as well as the benefits received from hearing aids in difficult listening environments (p < 0.05). Despite challenges of developing contexts, the mean scores distribution compared positively to similar reports from developed countries. Outcomes of improved quality of life emphasize the importance of providing affordable hearing aids and services to all hearing impaired individuals in South Africa.https://sajcd.org.za/index.php/sajcd/article/view/44aural rehabilitation, self-reported outcomes, developing countries, public health care sector, IOI-HA
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Elaine Pienaar
Natalie Stearn
De Wet Swanepoel
spellingShingle Elaine Pienaar
Natalie Stearn
De Wet Swanepoel
Self-reported outcomes of aural rehabilitation for adult hearing aid users in a developing South African context
South African Journal of Communication Disorders
aural rehabilitation, self-reported outcomes, developing countries, public health care sector, IOI-HA
author_facet Elaine Pienaar
Natalie Stearn
De Wet Swanepoel
author_sort Elaine Pienaar
title Self-reported outcomes of aural rehabilitation for adult hearing aid users in a developing South African context
title_short Self-reported outcomes of aural rehabilitation for adult hearing aid users in a developing South African context
title_full Self-reported outcomes of aural rehabilitation for adult hearing aid users in a developing South African context
title_fullStr Self-reported outcomes of aural rehabilitation for adult hearing aid users in a developing South African context
title_full_unstemmed Self-reported outcomes of aural rehabilitation for adult hearing aid users in a developing South African context
title_sort self-reported outcomes of aural rehabilitation for adult hearing aid users in a developing south african context
publisher AOSIS
series South African Journal of Communication Disorders
issn 0379-8046
2225-4765
publishDate 2010-12-01
description Hearing impairment has far reaching consequences for affected individuals, in terms of quality of life indicators. In a developing South African context the hearing impaired population is faced with limited aural rehabilitation services. This study evaluated self-reported outcomes of aural rehabilitation in a group of adults in the public healthcare sector with a standardized outcomes measurement tool (IOI-HA). Sixty-one respondents participated (44% males; 56% females), with a mean age of 69.7 years. Results revealed that the majority of respondents experienced favourable outcomes in all domains of the inventory comprising of: daily use of hearing aids, benefits provided by hearing aids, residual activity limitation, satisfaction with hearing aids, residual participation restriction, impact of hearing difficulties on others, and changes in quality of life. Statistically significant relationships were obtained between the daily use of hearing aids, the degree of hearing loss, and the type of hearing aids fitted, as well as the benefits received from hearing aids in difficult listening environments (p < 0.05). Despite challenges of developing contexts, the mean scores distribution compared positively to similar reports from developed countries. Outcomes of improved quality of life emphasize the importance of providing affordable hearing aids and services to all hearing impaired individuals in South Africa.
topic aural rehabilitation, self-reported outcomes, developing countries, public health care sector, IOI-HA
url https://sajcd.org.za/index.php/sajcd/article/view/44
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