Literature DB >> 21860968

Validity and reliability of the hearing handicap inventory for adults.

Camila Piccini Aiello1, Ivanildo Inácio de Lima1, Deborah Viviane Ferrari2.   

Abstract

UNLABELLED: The Hearing Handicap Inventory for Adults (HHIA) translated into Brazilian Portuguese has been used for clinical practice and research purposes; however, information regarding its ease of reading and psychometric properties are still lacking. AIM: To evaluate the ease of reading and psychometric properties of the Brazilian translation of this tool, including its validity and reliability.
MATERIALS AND METHODS: Prospective study. The questionnaire was applied to 30 normal hearing (Group A) and 113 hearing impaired (Group B) persons. Thirty two participants (group B) answered the questionnaire a second time. The Flesch readability index was calculated for each item in the questionnaire. The internal consistency, test-retest reliability and discriminant validity were evaluated.
RESULTS: Flesch's scores showed that the questionnaire was easy to read. Cronbach's alpha and Pearson's correlation showed high internal consistency. There was no significant difference between test and retest scores. Besides, correlation between these two scores was also high and significant. Student t test indicated significant difference between scores for groups A and B (discriminant validity).
CONCLUSIONS: The Hearing Handicap Inventory for Adults translated into Brazilian Portuguese maintained the reliability and validity of the English version. Further studies are needed to determine the convergent validity and construct validity for this instrument.

Entities:  

Mesh:

Year:  2011        PMID: 21860968      PMCID: PMC9450751          DOI: 10.1590/S1808-86942011000400005

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Braz J Otorhinolaryngol        ISSN: 1808-8686


INTRODUCTION

Today in health care there is a growing need to systematically and objectively measure, show and document the benefits or results from an intervention - the so-called “result assessment”. The result assessment can be used to provide data to government entities concerning the use of financial resources, to show certification agents the effectiveness of audiologic services rendered, to show patients and family members the changes which happened because of the intervention, to validate clinical decisions concerning individual hearing aid sound amplification device selection and fitting practices, to determine what is being done correctly and areas which need improvements in the service, as well as to establish good practices for the profession. One of the points of interest is to assess intervention results in the fields of activity limitation and participation restriction. Activity limitation is characterized as the consequences in functional performance impairment, in other words, in the execution of a given task or action. Participation restriction (handicap) concerns the involvement in life situations and it reflects the individual's adaptation to the environment as a result of the hearing loss and the handicap. In order to do that, it is necessary to determine the difficulties the patient experiences before and after the intervention. In regards to participation restriction, different questionnaires have been developed for this purpose, including the Hearing Handicap Inventory for Adults - HHIA. This questionnaire is based on a modified version of the Hearing Handicap Inventory for the Elderly - HHIE, to be used with individuals aged below 65 years. For such, three questions from the original HHIE questionnaire have been modified in order to include the items created to identify the effects of hearing loss on occupational issues, since younger adults live through this situation more often than the elderly, who are usually already retired. The original HHIA version, in English, has high internal consistency of its questions, test-retest reliability and low standard error. The HHIA questionnaire has been going through adaptations and validations for other languages. The Italian version of the HHIA kept the validity and reliability of the original version, being considered of high relevance in order to establish the non-auditory symptoms of the hearing impaired from that country. The HHIA questionnaire was translated into Brazilian Portuguese and has been used both in the audiology clinic as well as in research in order to quantify the handicap of a population, to assess the benefits of using the ISAD or that of intervention programs for people with noise-induced hearing loss8, 9, 10, 11, 12. Nonetheless, data on the validity and reliability of the HHIA translated into Brazilian Portuguese has not been reported in the literature, and this is a limiting factor in regards of the usefulness of the instrument for use in research or to document clinical interventions. The goal of the present study was to assess the psychometric properties of the Adult Auditory Handicap questionnaire translated into the Brazilian Portuguese, including its validity and reliability, as well as its ease of reading and application in adult normal hearing and hearing impaired individuals.

MATERIALS AND METHODS

Prospective study held in the Audiology Clinic of the Dentistry School of Baurú - University of São Paulo (FOB/USP), approved by the Ethics in Research Committee of this Institution (process # 05/2009). All 143 participants volunteered and signed the Informed Consent Form. The participants were broken down into the two groups described below.

Group A

Made up of 30 normal hearing adults (15 women and 15 men), with ages between 20 and 60 years (mean age of 38.5 years). None of the participants had a past or complained of hearing disorders, and they also did not have any external ear or tympanic membrane disorder found upon ear inspection. All the individuals were submitted to audiometric screening (carried out in a sound-treated booth, and the 250 to 8000 Hz frequencies were studied, with a presentation level equal to 25 dB HL). All the individuals could read and they did not have previous knowledge about the Auditory Handicap Inventory for Adults.

Group B1

Data from this group can be found on Table 1. Made up of 113 individuals (52 women and 61 men) with ages varying between 21 and 64 years (mean age of 53.6 years), with bilateral post-lingual sensorineural hearing loss, symmetrical (n=85) or asymmetrical (n=28). The ISO mean (frequency of 500, 1k, 2k and 4k Hz) of the audiometric thresholds from the best ear varied from 26.25 to 92.5 dB HL (mean of 49.7 dB HL). According to the ISO mean value from the best ear, the hearing losses were classified as mild (n=32; 28.3%), moderate (n=62; 54.8%); severe (n=13; 11.5%) and profound (n=6; 5.3%).
Table 1

Data on the participants' hearing loss

# of individualsTotal
26 to 4032
Threshold mean dB HL (500, 1k, 2k, 4kHz)
41 to 6062113
61 to 8013
> 806
15 to 3014
Speech recognition threshold - SRT (dB HL)
35 to 5062107
55 to 7024
75 to 907
Up to 12 m.2
Hearing impairment duration (months)12 to 36 m.11
37 to 60 m.11106
61 to 120 m.26
> 120 m.56
Data on the participants' hearing loss It must be stressed that seven participants were not able to report on the duration of the hearing loss. Six participants were not able to undergo the speech recognition threshold test because of their hearing loss severity (Table 1). Information about educational level was obtained for 108 participants, and they had incomplete (n=47; 43.5%) and complete (n=10; 9.2%) basic education; incomplete (n=10; 9.2%) and complete (n=30; 27.7%) high school education; and complete higher education (n=8; 7.4%). Three individuals (2.7%) were illiterate. Socioeconomical information was obtained for 112 participants based on the Socioeconomical Instrumental Classification protocol present in the patients' charts. The following classifications were checked: low inferior (n=13; 11,6%), low superior (n=76; 67.8%), medium inferior (n=19; 16.9%) and medium (n=4; 3.5%). All Group B participants were regularly enrolled in the FOB-USP audiology clinic and did not have previous experience with the ISAD. We used the Adult Auditory Handicap questionnaire translated into Brazilian Portuguese (Attachment 1). This questionnaire is made up of 25 questions broken down into two subscales: social (12 questions, which measure the effects of hearing loss in different social situations) and emotional (13 questions, which estimate the behavior and emotional responses of the individual in relation to his hearing loss). All questions are identified according to the scale to which they belong. For each question there are three possible answers: “yes” (equal to 4 points), “sometimes” (worth 2 points) and “no” (equal to 0 points). The scoring was carried out manually, when we calculated the total score (summation of the points for the 25 questions), as well as to the emotional and social subscales, separately. The total HHIA score can vary between 0 and 100; the social scale score can vary between 0 and 48 and the emotional scale can vary between 0 and 52. Higher values indicate a greater perception of the auditory handicap. Initially, we calculated the Flesch Reading Ease Index (FREI) for each question in the questionnaire in order to assess the level of text reading difficulty based on the length of the words and phrases. FREI assesses the degree of ease of reading the texts in a percentage scale. The formula includes sentence size and the number of syllables in a sample of 100 words. The higher the value, the greater the ease of reading the text assessed and the lower the educational level necessary for its understanding. The scale is made up of seven levels, varying from “very easy” (score between 90 and 100%) to “very difficult “ (scores between 0 and 30%). For Group A, the questionnaire was applied in the form of pen and paper, and the individual was asked to read the 25 questions and check the answer he/she thought more appropriate. The time it took the participant to fill out the questionnaire was calculated. At the end of it, the examiner interviewed the participant in order to check his/her perceptions on the ease of understanding and filling out the questionnaire. For Group B, the HHIA questionnaire was applied in the form of an interview after audiologic diagnosis. The examiner read the 25 questions together with the participant who was asked to check the answer he/she thought more adequate. For 32 individuals (13 women and 19 men) from Group B, the Hearing Handicap Inventory for Adults was applied a second time, again in the form of an interview, at least two weeks after the first application, but prior to the ISAD fitting, and this time interval was considered acceptable to minimize the issue of memory for the questionnaire items which could contribute to a strong correlation between the two applications. The statistical analysis was carried out by means of the Stata software. In regards of reliability, for Group B participants, the internal consistence of the questionnaire was measured by the Cronbach's alpha, which was also calculated when each item was removed from the questionnaire. The Pearson's correlation coefficient was utilized in order to study the relationship between the total score and the social and emotional subscales, as well as the correlation between the two subscales. In order to assess the questionnaire's test and retest variability, we calculated the Pearson's correlation coefficient between the total score and that of the social and emotional subscales between the first and second application of the questionnaire. The existence of a significant difference between the scores obtained in the two applications was analyzed by means of the paired t-test. We also calculated the standard error and the 95% confidence interval. In order to check the discriminant validity, the questionnaire scores obtained for Group A and for 32 participants from Group B were compared by means of the Student t test. In all the analyses we adopted a 5% significance level.

RESULTS

The application of the Flesch Reading Ease Index showed 13 questions which were considered very easy or reasonably easy, six questions were considered standard, five were considered reasonably difficult (E-2, E-5, S-15, E-17, S-21) and one question (S-10) was considered very difficult. The scores obtained from the questionnaire for Group A participants was 1,1. For this group, the time taken to fill out the questionnaire varied between 1.30 and 4.13 minutes (mean of 2.28 minutes). When questioned about the level of difficulty found in the filling out of the questionnaire, 29 individuals (96%) reported that it was easy to understand. For Group B participants, the mean scores and standard deviation values obtained from the HHIA questionnaire was equal to 52.2 ± 26.6 (total); 25.9 ± 12.1 (social) and 26.3 ± 15.3 (emotional). Figure 1 shows the mean and standard deviation for the HHIA score for Group B participants, according to the degree of hearing loss (Fig. 1).
Figure 1

Median and standard deviation of the total score and that from the social and emotional subscales for Group B, in accordance with the hearing loss in the best ear (n=113).

Median and standard deviation of the total score and that from the social and emotional subscales for Group B, in accordance with the hearing loss in the best ear (n=113). HHIA's internal consistency using the Cronbach's alpha was 0.92 (total score), 0.91 (social) and 0.84 (emotional). When each one of the items was taken off the scale, the Cronbach's alpha varied between 0.93 and 0.94. the Pearson's correlation coefficient and the significance level between the total score and that of the social and emotional subscales for Group B participants can be found on Table 2.
Table 2

Pearson's correlation coefficient between the total score and that from the social and emotional subscales of the HHIA for Group B (n=113).

HHIA - SocialHHIA - Total
r = 0,86r = 0,97
HHIA - Emotionalp = 0,00p = 0,00
r = 0,96
HHIA - Social-p = 0,00
Pearson's correlation coefficient between the total score and that from the social and emotional subscales of the HHIA for Group B (n=113). The questionnaire's test and retest variability results, calculated from a sample of 32 participants from Group B can be found on Table 3.
Table 3

Mean and standard deviation values from the scores obtained; how significant is the comparison between the means and correlation of the results from the test and retest for Group B participants (n=32).

TestRetestPaired t Test p valuePearson's correlation (r)
Total HHIA44,8 ± 27,945,9 ± 270,720,81U+0002A
Social HHIA22,4 ± 12,422,9± 12,70,730,79U+0002A
22,4 ± 16,323 ± 14,70,760,78U+0002A

p=0,00

Mean and standard deviation values from the scores obtained; how significant is the comparison between the means and correlation of the results from the test and retest for Group B participants (n=32). p=0,00 The discriminant validity was checked by the comparison between results from Groups A and B, as per depicted on Table 4.
Table 4

Comparison between the mean values and the deviations of the scores obtained for Group A (n=30) and for Group B (n=113).

Group AGroup Bt Student test p value
Total HHIA1,1 ± 2,352,2 ± 26,60,00
Social HHIA0,4 ± 1,125,9± 12,10,00
Emotional HHIA0,6 ± 1,426,2 ± 15,30,00
Comparison between the mean values and the deviations of the scores obtained for Group A (n=30) and for Group B (n=113).

DISCUSSION

In general, the results from the reading ease index of the questions which make up the HHIA questionnaire in Portuguese are of ease reading, nonetheless, it has been suggested that question S-10 be remade. One Group A participant considered the language utilized in the instrument as being too technical. The time it took to fill out the questionnaire, in the form of pen and paper, indicated that it can be used in clinical practice, without requiring much clinical time. It must be stressed that most Group A participants were individuals with high education, which not always represents the true population seeking the public health-care system. For Group A, we obtained the lowest scores in the HHIA questionnaire (Table 4). The social subscale score varied between 0 and 4 points (mean = 0.47) and the emotional subscale varied between 0 and 6 points (mean = 0.67). The total score varied between 0 and 10 points (mean = 1.13). Such results indicated that no handicap was perceived, which was expected since the participants were normal hearing people. Reliability is defined as the degree in which the measured result reflects the true result. In the present study, reliability was measured by the internal consistency and the test-retest consistency. The internal consistency checks the degree in which a group of observed variables is measuring a given construct. The minimum acceptable value for the Chronbach' alpha coefficient for internal consistency is equal to 0.70. The general reliability of the HHIA translated into Brazilian Portuguese measured by the Cronbach's alpha was 0.92. Even when each one of the items is removed from the scale, Cronbach's alpha remained high, varying between 0.93 and 0.94. These results are similar to those from the original version - in English, and also from the Italian version of the instrument. We found strong and significant correlations between the total score and that from the social and emotional subscales, as well as between the subscales (Table 2), indicating that in the translation of the HHIA into Portuguese there are associations between the constructs which were measured in each subscale with the total score of the questionnaire. In the original version in English, we observed correlations between 0.84 and 0.9. In regards of the test-retest consistency, it is possible to notice that the differences between the mean values obtained between the first and second times the questionnaire was applied varied between 0.5 (social subscale) and 1.1 (total score) and these were not significant (Table 3). We also noticed that the standard deviations found in the test and retest were very similar, indicating that the variation in score between the participants was similar from one time the questionnaire was employed to the other. And finally, strong and statistically significant correlations were found between the first and the second time the questionnaire was employed. This data is in agreement with what was found for the original version, in English and for validation in Italian, when we found correlations around 0.. The test-retest reliability shows the stability of an instrument in the long run. This means that the HHIA translated into Brazilian Portuguese may produce valid and consistent results from one time it is used to another. One of the HHIA' goals is to serve as criterion to document the effects of treatment, including the benefits of using an ISAD, throughout time, this result is extremely important. In regards of the discriminant validity, the hypothesis adopted was the one that the questionnaire shows discriminant validity, the scores from individuals with hearing loss would differ from the scores from normal hearing people. As we can see on Table 4, Group B individuals had significantly higher scores in the HHIA (indicating a higher handicap) when compared to those from Group A. This happened both from the total scores and from the subscales such as those from comparing each question from the questionnaire individually. However, it must be stressed that in the present study it was not possible to match the socio-demographic data from Groups A and B participants, and this may have influenced the results.

CONCLUSION

The results from this study show that the Brazilian Portuguese version of the Hearing Handicap Inventory for Adults maintains the validity and reliability of its original version. Other studies are needed in order to establish the converging validity and that of the construct of this instrument.
Attachment 1: THE HEARING HANDICAP INVENTORY FOR ADULTS (HHIA)
(Newman, Weinstein, Jacobson e Hug 1990)
(Adaptation for Brazilian Portuguese - Almeida, 1998)
Name: _________________________________________________ Date: __________________
Instructions: The following questionnaire has 25 questions. You must choose only one answer for each question, checking (X) the one you find more adequate. Some questions are similar, but in reality they have subtle differences which enable a better assessment of the answers. There is no right or wrong answer. You should check the one you find most adequate to your case or situation.
Yes (4)Sometimes (2)No (0)
S-1Does your hearing difficulty make you use the phone less often than you'd like?
E-2Does your hearing difficulty make you feel embarrassed or out of place when you are introduced to strangers?
S-3Does your hearing difficulty make you avoid groups of people?
E-4Does your hearing difficulty make you touchy?
E-5Does your hearing difficulty make you feel frustrated or unhappy when talking to people of your family?
S-6Does your hearing impairment cause any other difficulties when you go to a party or social meeting?
E-7Does your hearing difficulty make you frustrated when talking to work mates?
S-8Do you feel hearing difficulties when you go to the movies or the theater?
E-9Do you feel harmed or down because of your hearing difficulty?
S-10Does you hearing impairment cause difficulties when you visit friends, relatives or neighbors?
S-11Does your hearing difficulty cause you problems to hear/understand work mates?
E-12Does your hearing difficulty make you nervous?
S-13Does your hearing difficulty make you visit friends, relatives or neighbors less often than you'd like to?
E-14Does your hearing difficulty make you argue or fight with your family?
S-15Does your hearing difficulty cause you trouble to watch TV or listen to the radio?
S-16Does your hearing difficulty make you go out shopping less often than you'd like to?
E-17Does your hearing difficulty make you annoyed or unhappy?
E-18Does your hearing difficulty make you prefer to be alone?
S-19Does your hearing difficulty make you want to talk less to the people in your family?
E-20Do you think that your hearing difficulty reduces or limits your personal or social life somehow?
S-21Does your hearing difficulty cause you trouble when you are in a restaurant with family or friends?
E-22Does your hearing difficulty make you feel sad or depressed?
S-23Does your hearing difficulty make you watch less TV or listen to the radio less often than you'd like to?
E-24Does your hearing difficulty make you feel embarrassed or less comfortable when you talk to friends?
E-25Does your hearing difficulty make you feel isolated or left aside within a group of people?
FOR PHYSICIAN USE: Total score: __________ Subtotal E: ________ S: ________
  9 in total

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5.  Test-retest reliability of the hearing handicap inventory for adults.

Authors:  C W Newman; B E Weinstein; G P Jacobson; G A Hug
Journal:  Ear Hear       Date:  1991-10       Impact factor: 3.570

6.  Measuring the psychosocial consequences of hearing loss in a working adult population: focus on validity and reliability of the Italian translation of the hearing handicap inventory.

Authors:  D Monzani; E Genovese; S Palma; V Rovatti; M Borgonzoni; A Martini
Journal:  Acta Otorhinolaryngol Ital       Date:  2007-08       Impact factor: 2.124

7.  The hearing handicap inventory for the elderly: a new tool.

Authors:  I M Ventry; B E Weinstein
Journal:  Ear Hear       Date:  1982 May-Jun       Impact factor: 3.570

8.  [Study of benefit and of acclimatization in recent users of hearing aids].

Authors:  Raquel Martins da Costa Amorim; Katia de Almeida
Journal:  Pro Fono       Date:  2007 Jan-Apr

9.  Hearing aid fitting process in users fitted in a federal public institution: part II--Self-assessment questionnaire results.

Authors:  Carine Dias de Freitas; Maristela Julio Costa
Journal:  Braz J Otorhinolaryngol       Date:  2007 Sep-Oct
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  14 in total

Review 1.  [State of the art of quality-of-life measurement in patients with chronic otitis media and conductive hearing loss].

Authors:  S Lailach; I Baumann; T Zahnert; M Neudert
Journal:  HNO       Date:  2018-08       Impact factor: 1.284

2.  Hearing loss and hearing needs in an adult homeless population: a prospective cross-sectional study.

Authors:  Christopher W Noel; Florence Mok; Vincent Wu; Antoine Eskander; Christopher M K L Yao; Stephen W Hwang; Myrna Lichter; Melissa Reekie; Sean Smith; Ian Syrett; Molly Zirkle; Vincent Lin; John M Lee
Journal:  CMAJ Open       Date:  2020-03-16

3.  Elaboration and Evaluation of Contents about Hearing Health Inserted in Cybertutor.

Authors:  Camila de Castro Corrêa; Ricelly Avila da Silva; Wanderléia Quinhoneiro Blasca
Journal:  Int Arch Otorhinolaryngol       Date:  2014-01-07

4.  Use of the satisfaction with amplification in daily life questionnaire to assess patient satisfaction following remote hearing aid adjustments (telefitting).

Authors:  Silvio Pires Penteado; Ricardo Ferreira Bento; Linamara Rizzo Battistella; Sara Manami Silva; Prasha Sooful
Journal:  JMIR Med Inform       Date:  2014-09-02

5.  Relationship between Speech Perception and Level of Satisfaction of Hearing Aid Users.

Authors:  Erika Barioni Mantello; Carla Dias da Silva; Eduardo Tanaka Massuda; Miguel Angelo Hyppolito; Ana Cláudia Mirândola Barbosa Dos Reis
Journal:  Int Arch Otorhinolaryngol       Date:  2015-12-17

6.  Self-reported participation restrictions in normal hearing individuals in thyroid ontogeny: Evidence of subclinical changes.

Authors:  Caio Leônidas Oliveira de Andrade; Gabriela Carvalho Machado; Luan Paulo Franco Magalhães; Elen Pereira de Jesus; Elaine Alves Matias; Taíse Lima de Oliveira Cerqueira; Hélida Braga de Oliveira; Luciene da Cruz Fernandes; Helton Estrela Ramos; Crésio de Aragão Dantas Alves
Journal:  J Otol       Date:  2018-11-20

7.  Self-reported hearing loss in Russians: the population-based Ural Eye and Medical Study.

Authors:  Mukharram M Bikbov; Rinat R Fayzrakhmanov; Gyulli M Kazakbaeva; Rinat M Zainullin; Venera F Salavatova; Timur R Gilmanshin; Inga I Arslangareeva; Nikolai A Nikitin; Songhomitra Panda-Jonas; Svetlana R Mukhamadieva; Dilya F Yakupova; Renat I Khikmatullin; Said K Aminev; Ildar F Nuriev; Artur F Zaynetdinov; Yulia V Uzianbaeva; Jost B Jonas
Journal:  BMJ Open       Date:  2019-03-20       Impact factor: 2.692

8.  Translation, Adaptation and Cross-Cultural Validation of Hearing Handicap Inventory for Adult in Malay Language.

Authors:  Tengku Zulaila Hasma Binti Tengku Zam Zam; Ahmad Aidil Arafat Dzulkarnain; Sarah Rahmat; Masnira Jusoh
Journal:  J Audiol Otol       Date:  2019-02-08

9.  Prevalence of and factors associated with low Back pain, thoracic spine pain and neck pain in Bashkortostan, Russia: the Ural Eye and Medical Study.

Authors:  Mukharram M Bikbov; Gyulli M Kazakbaeva; Rinat M Zainullin; Venera F Salavatova; Timur R Gilmanshin; Inga I Arslangareeva; Nikolai A Nikitin; Svetlana R Mukhamadieva; Dilya F Yakupova; Songhomitra Panda-Jonas; Renat I Khikmatullin; Said K Aminev; Ildar F Nuriev; Artur F Zaynetdinov; Yulia V Uzianbaeva; Jost B Jonas
Journal:  BMC Musculoskelet Disord       Date:  2020-02-01       Impact factor: 2.362

10.  Hearing Loss in the Elderly: Is the Hearing Handicap Inventory for the Elderly - Screening Version Effective in Diagnosis When Compared to the Audiometric Test?

Authors:  Alexandre Barbosa Servidoni; Lucieni de Oliveira Conterno
Journal:  Int Arch Otorhinolaryngol       Date:  2017-03-31
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