Donna R Halloran1, J Michael Hardin, Terry C Wall. 1. Division of General Academic Pediatrics, Saint Louis University, 1465 S Grand Blvd., St Louis, MO 63110, USA. dhallor2@slu.edu
Abstract
OBJECTIVE: To estimate the sensitivity and specificity of pure-tone audiometry hearing screening in the primary care setting. DESIGN: Prospective cohort study. SETTING: Eight academic and private pediatric practices. PARTICIPANTS: A subset of children from a convenience sample of 1061 children between 3 and 19 years of age were screened for hearing loss using pure-tone audiometry. Intervention Formal audiologic evaluations (gold standard) for those children referred by their primary care physician (28 children) and for a random sample of children not referred (102 children). Main Exposure Pure-tone audiometry screening. MAIN OUTCOME MEASURES: Audiologic evaluations. RESULTS: A total of 28 children were referred to an audiologist for formal hearing testing after pure-tone audiometry screening during a well-child visit, at which 25 children did not pass the initial screening and 3 could not complete the screening. Of the 25 children, only 7 were evaluated by an audiologist, for a follow-up rate of 25%. One child was diagnosed as having hearing loss. Formal audiologic assessment was also performed on a random sample of 102 children who were not referred to the audiologist. For the random sample, hearing loss was identified in 2 of 76 (3%) children who passed and 1 of 16 (6%) children who did not pass pure tone audiometry screening. The sensitivity and specificity of pure-tone audiometry were 50% and 78%, respectively. CONCLUSION: In light of the increasing burden on physicians to provide preventive care, this study calls into question the value of hearing screening using pure-tone audiometry during well-child visits given the lack of follow-up after referral and the poor sensitivity.
OBJECTIVE: To estimate the sensitivity and specificity of pure-tone audiometry hearing screening in the primary care setting. DESIGN: Prospective cohort study. SETTING: Eight academic and private pediatric practices. PARTICIPANTS: A subset of children from a convenience sample of 1061 children between 3 and 19 years of age were screened for hearing loss using pure-tone audiometry. Intervention Formal audiologic evaluations (gold standard) for those children referred by their primary care physician (28 children) and for a random sample of children not referred (102 children). Main Exposure Pure-tone audiometry screening. MAIN OUTCOME MEASURES: Audiologic evaluations. RESULTS: A total of 28 children were referred to an audiologist for formal hearing testing after pure-tone audiometry screening during a well-child visit, at which 25 children did not pass the initial screening and 3 could not complete the screening. Of the 25 children, only 7 were evaluated by an audiologist, for a follow-up rate of 25%. One child was diagnosed as having hearing loss. Formal audiologic assessment was also performed on a random sample of 102 children who were not referred to the audiologist. For the random sample, hearing loss was identified in 2 of 76 (3%) children who passed and 1 of 16 (6%) children who did not pass pure tone audiometry screening. The sensitivity and specificity of pure-tone audiometry were 50% and 78%, respectively. CONCLUSION: In light of the increasing burden on physicians to provide preventive care, this study calls into question the value of hearing screening using pure-tone audiometry during well-child visits given the lack of follow-up after referral and the poor sensitivity.
Authors: Meghan Phelan; Susan S Hayashi; Kara Sauerburger; Jennifer Henry; Ningying Wu; Robert J Hayashi Journal: Pediatr Blood Cancer Date: 2021-12-02 Impact factor: 3.167
Authors: James E Saunders; Sarah Bessen; Isabelle Magro; Devin Cowan; Marvin Gonzalez Quiroz; Karen Mojica-Alvarez; Donoso Penalba; Catherine Reike; Christopher E Niemczak; Abigail Fellows; Jay C Buckey Journal: J Glob Health Date: 2022-08-09 Impact factor: 7.664