How the World’s Children Hear: A Narrative Review of School Hearing Screening Programs Globally

Objective School hearing screening may mitigate the effects of childhood hearing loss through early identification and intervention. This study provides an overview of existing school hearing screening programs around the world, identifies gaps in the literature, and develops priorities for future r...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Michael Yong MD, Neelima Panth MD, Catherine M. McMahon PhD, Peter R. Thorne PhD, Susan D. Emmett MD, MPH
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: SAGE Publishing 2020-05-01
Series:OTO Open
Online Access:https://doi.org/10.1177/2473974X20923580
id doaj-91978d75d5dc480caf56190d3311f84f
record_format Article
spelling doaj-91978d75d5dc480caf56190d3311f84f2020-11-25T03:48:40ZengSAGE PublishingOTO Open2473-974X2020-05-01410.1177/2473974X20923580How the World’s Children Hear: A Narrative Review of School Hearing Screening Programs GloballyMichael Yong MD0Neelima Panth MD1Catherine M. McMahon PhD2Peter R. Thorne PhD3Susan D. Emmett MD, MPH4Bloomberg School of Public Health, Johns Hopkins University, Baltimore, Maryland, USASchool of Medicine, Duke University, Durham, North Carolina, USAHEAR Centre, Macquarie University, Sydney, AustraliaEisdell Moore Centre, University of Auckland, Auckland, New ZealandCenter for Health Policy and Inequalities Research, Duke University, Durham, North Carolina, USAObjective School hearing screening may mitigate the effects of childhood hearing loss through early identification and intervention. This study provides an overview of existing school hearing screening programs around the world, identifies gaps in the literature, and develops priorities for future research. Data Sources A structured search of the PubMed, Embase, and Cochrane Library databases. Review Methods A total of 65 articles were included according to predefined inclusion criteria. Parameters of interest included age groups screened, audiometric protocols, referral criteria, use of adjunct screening tests, rescreening procedures, hearing loss prevalence, screening test sensitivity and specificity, and loss to follow-up. Conclusions School hearing screening is mandated in few regions worldwide, and there is little accountability regarding whether testing is performed. Screening protocols differ in terms of screening tests included and thresholds used. The most common protocols included a mix of pure tone screening (0.5, 1, 2, and 4 kHz), otoscopy, and tympanometry. Estimates of region-specific disease prevalence were methodologically inaccurate, and rescreening was poorly addressed. Loss to follow-up was also a ubiquitous concern. Implications for Practice There is an urgent need for standardized school hearing screening protocol guidelines globally, which will facilitate more accurate studies of hearing loss prevalence and determination of screening test sensitivity and specificity. In turn, these steps will increase the robustness with which we can study the effects of screening and treatment interventions, and they will support the development of guidelines on the screening, diagnostic, and rehabilitation services needed to reduce the impact of childhood hearing loss.https://doi.org/10.1177/2473974X20923580
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Michael Yong MD
Neelima Panth MD
Catherine M. McMahon PhD
Peter R. Thorne PhD
Susan D. Emmett MD, MPH
spellingShingle Michael Yong MD
Neelima Panth MD
Catherine M. McMahon PhD
Peter R. Thorne PhD
Susan D. Emmett MD, MPH
How the World’s Children Hear: A Narrative Review of School Hearing Screening Programs Globally
OTO Open
author_facet Michael Yong MD
Neelima Panth MD
Catherine M. McMahon PhD
Peter R. Thorne PhD
Susan D. Emmett MD, MPH
author_sort Michael Yong MD
title How the World’s Children Hear: A Narrative Review of School Hearing Screening Programs Globally
title_short How the World’s Children Hear: A Narrative Review of School Hearing Screening Programs Globally
title_full How the World’s Children Hear: A Narrative Review of School Hearing Screening Programs Globally
title_fullStr How the World’s Children Hear: A Narrative Review of School Hearing Screening Programs Globally
title_full_unstemmed How the World’s Children Hear: A Narrative Review of School Hearing Screening Programs Globally
title_sort how the world’s children hear: a narrative review of school hearing screening programs globally
publisher SAGE Publishing
series OTO Open
issn 2473-974X
publishDate 2020-05-01
description Objective School hearing screening may mitigate the effects of childhood hearing loss through early identification and intervention. This study provides an overview of existing school hearing screening programs around the world, identifies gaps in the literature, and develops priorities for future research. Data Sources A structured search of the PubMed, Embase, and Cochrane Library databases. Review Methods A total of 65 articles were included according to predefined inclusion criteria. Parameters of interest included age groups screened, audiometric protocols, referral criteria, use of adjunct screening tests, rescreening procedures, hearing loss prevalence, screening test sensitivity and specificity, and loss to follow-up. Conclusions School hearing screening is mandated in few regions worldwide, and there is little accountability regarding whether testing is performed. Screening protocols differ in terms of screening tests included and thresholds used. The most common protocols included a mix of pure tone screening (0.5, 1, 2, and 4 kHz), otoscopy, and tympanometry. Estimates of region-specific disease prevalence were methodologically inaccurate, and rescreening was poorly addressed. Loss to follow-up was also a ubiquitous concern. Implications for Practice There is an urgent need for standardized school hearing screening protocol guidelines globally, which will facilitate more accurate studies of hearing loss prevalence and determination of screening test sensitivity and specificity. In turn, these steps will increase the robustness with which we can study the effects of screening and treatment interventions, and they will support the development of guidelines on the screening, diagnostic, and rehabilitation services needed to reduce the impact of childhood hearing loss.
url https://doi.org/10.1177/2473974X20923580
work_keys_str_mv AT michaelyongmd howtheworldschildrenhearanarrativereviewofschoolhearingscreeningprogramsglobally
AT neelimapanthmd howtheworldschildrenhearanarrativereviewofschoolhearingscreeningprogramsglobally
AT catherinemmcmahonphd howtheworldschildrenhearanarrativereviewofschoolhearingscreeningprogramsglobally
AT peterrthornephd howtheworldschildrenhearanarrativereviewofschoolhearingscreeningprogramsglobally
AT susandemmettmdmph howtheworldschildrenhearanarrativereviewofschoolhearingscreeningprogramsglobally
_version_ 1724497700822450176