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The Need for Improved Detection and Management of Adult-Onset Hearing Loss in Australia
Author(s) -
Catherine McMahon,
Bamini Gopinath,
Julie Schneider,
Jennifer Reath,
Louise Hickson,
Stephen Leeder,
Paul Mitchell,
Robert Cowan
Publication year - 2013
Publication title -
international journal of otolaryngology
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
eISSN - 1687-921X
pISSN - 1687-9201
DOI - 10.1155/2013/308509
Subject(s) - hearing loss , medicine , referral , life expectancy , audiology , depression (economics) , population , health care , public health , abandonment (legal) , gerontology , family medicine , environmental health , nursing , economics , political science , law , macroeconomics , economic growth
Adult-onset hearing loss is insidious and typically diagnosed and managed several years after onset. Often, this is after the loss having led to multiple negative consequences including effects on employment, depressive symptoms, and increased risk of mortality. In contrast, the use of hearing aids is associated with reduced depression, longer life expectancy, and retention in the workplace. Despite this, several studies indicate high levels of unmet need for hearing health services in older adults and poor use of prescribed hearing aids, often leading to their abandonment. In Australia, the largest component of financial cost of hearing loss (excluding the loss of well-being) is due to lost workplace productivity. Nonetheless, the Australian public health system does not have an effective and sustainable hearing screening strategy to tackle the problem of poor detection of adult-onset hearing loss. Given the increasing prevalence and disease burden of hearing impairment in adults, two key areas are not adequately met in the Australian healthcare system: (1) early identification of persons with chronic hearing impairment; (2) appropriate and targeted referral of these patients to hearing health service providers. This paper reviews the current literature, including population-based data from the Blue Mountains Hearing Study, and suggests different models for early detection of adult-onset hearing loss.

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