Literature DB >> 27366055

The development and standardization of Self-assessment for Hearing Screening of the Elderly.

Gibbeum Kim1, Wondo Na1, Gungu Kim1, Woojae Han2, Jinsook Kim2.   

Abstract

PURPOSE: The present study aimed to develop and standardize a screening tool for elderly people who wish to check for themselves their level of hearing loss.
METHODS: The Self-assessment for Hearing Screening of the Elderly (SHSE) consisted of 20 questions based on the characteristics of presbycusis using a five-point scale: seven questions covered general issues related to sensorineural hearing loss, seven covered hearing difficulty under distracting listening conditions, two covered hearing difficulty with fast-rated speech, and four covered the working memory function during communication. To standardize SHSE, 83 elderly participants took part in the study: 25 with normal hearing, and 22, 23, and 13 with mild, moderate, and moderate-to-severe sensorineural hearing loss, respectively, according to their hearing sensitivity. All were retested 3 weeks later using the same questionnaire to confirm its reliability. In addition, validity was assessed using various hearing tests such as a sentence test with background noise, a time-compressed speech test, and a digit span test.
RESULTS: SHSE and its subcategories showed good internal consistency. SHSE and its subcategories demonstrated high test-retest reliability. A high correlation was observed between the total scores and pure-tone thresholds, which indicated gradually increased SHSE scores of 42.24%, 55.27%, 66.61%, and 78.15% for normal hearing, mild, moderate, and moderate-to-severe groups, respectively. With regard to construct validity, SHSE showed a high negative correlation with speech perception scores in noise and a moderate negative correlation with scores of time-compressed speech perception. However, there was no statistical correlation between digit span results and either the SHSE total or its subcategories. A confirmatory factor analysis supported three factors in SHSE.
CONCLUSION: We found that the developed SHSE had valuable internal consistency, test-retest reliability, and convergent and construct validity. These results suggest that SHSE is a reliable and valid measure to represent the degree of hearing loss in the elderly.

Entities:  

Keywords:  aging; hearing screening; presbycusis; questionnaire; self-assessment

Mesh:

Year:  2016        PMID: 27366055      PMCID: PMC4915296          DOI: 10.2147/CIA.S107102

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Clin Interv Aging        ISSN: 1176-9092            Impact factor:   4.458


Introduction

Hearing loss is the third most prevalent chronic disability in elderly people.1 Age-related hearing loss, or presbycusis, is estimated to exist in approximately two-thirds of people aged 70 years and older.2 The number of elderly who suffer from presbycusis worldwide is likely to increase rapidly as the population ages.3 Thus, presbycusis is a serious problem in an aging society and can threaten the elderly with another age-associated disability. Researchers have argued that hearing loss may result from age-related changes in auditory processing (peripheral system)4,5 or reflect age-related deterioration in the cognitive processing of speech (central system)6,7 or both.8,9 Nevertheless, common audiometric results of presbycusis are interpreted as bilateral, symmetrical, and high-frequency hearing loss.10 Most elderly people with presbycusis experience difficulty in understanding speech, especially in noisy and reverberant enviroments.11 In addition, these individuals show some age-related cognitive decline.12 The occurrence of presbycusis causes a slowing of temporal auditory processing, and thus results in poor speech perception when a talker speaks at a slightly faster-than-normal tempo.12 Working memory is also influenced by the degree to which and rate at which one’s hearing ages.13 The negative effect from aging produces a smaller storage capacity for working memory than in younger adults and thus makes communication difficult, especially for the elderly with hearing loss. Indirectly, presbycusis may contribute to the isolation of elderly people by limiting their interaction at social gatherings and restricting their use of the phone.14 Regardless, presbycusis is often difficult to recognize due to its slow progress, so hearing aids are not sufficiently used and rehabilitation is inefficient.15 Thus, a more convenient and valid screening tool for hearing assessment is essential for the elderly. Many contemporary researchers have developed self-assessment questionnaires for hearing-impaired listeners. Their products are widely used for patients who suffer from hearing loss and related dysfunctions in the audiology clinical setting.16 However, existing questionnaires have limitations, particularly when applied to the elderly. First, most of the questionnaires were not developed for patients with age-related hearing loss but for all adults with hearing impairment caused by noise, ototoxic drugs, and injury. For example, the Client-Oriented Scale of Improvement (COSI) asks the hearing-impaired patient to list five listening situations in which he or she experiences difficulty, and clinicians use this information in counseling and creating a plan for rehabilitation.17 Although COSI is a valid self-reporting questionnaire, it asks the patient to name five listening conditions with questions in an open-set format. Consequently, older people may have more trouble and need more time with this type of question than other adults with hearing loss. One of the most popular questionnaires, the Abbreviated Profile of Hearing Aid Performance (APHAP), is useful in quantifying the degree of difficulty caused by hearing loss in the adult patient,18 but it does not consider specific features of age-related hearing loss such as hearing difficulty with fast-rate speech and working memory ability. Second, large parts of the self-reporting questionnaires focus on evaluating performance with the use of a hearing aid under various listening situations. For example, the International Outcome Inventory for Hearing Aids (IOI-HA), which has been translated into 24 languages and is used globally, only includes seven items that measure whether hearing-impaired patients improve their listening ability after wearing hearing aids in daily life.19 Also, the Profile of Hearing Aid Benefits (PHAB),20 Satisfaction with Amplification in Daily Life (SADL),21 and Speech Spatial and Quality of Hearing Scale (SSQ)22 have been widely employed by hearing aid users. However, those self-assessment questionnaires do not apply to elderly people who suspect hearing loss and are non-hearing-aid users.16 Third, the questionnaires for the elderly developed so far mainly evaluate the negative effect of their hearing deficit on emotional and social problems. The Hearing Handicap Inventory for the Elderly (HHIE)23 and Korean Evaluation Scale for Hearing Handicap (KESHH)24 are representative of the questionnaires for elderly hearing-impaired patients. But, their focus is on physical condition, personal characteristics, and psychosocial and emotional issues induced by hearing loss. Thus, these scores provide a complex and comprehensive index rather than a direct evaluation of hearing loss. In summary, none of these questionnaires highlights the degrees of hearing loss relating directly to the nature of presbycusis. In this respect, the purpose of the present study was to develop and standardize a hearing screening tool for the elderly who want to check themselves for their degree of hearing loss. The results will provide a valuable self-assessment questionnaire, yielding opportunities for earlier clinical interventions and better treatment options.

Methods

Selection of items

Two hundred and ninety-two items were extracted from eleven questionnaires (eg, APHAP, COSI, GHABP, HHIA, HHIE, IOI-HA, KESHH, PHAB, SADL, SSQ) that are popular and commonly used in the audiology clinic and then classified by category in terms of listening environments. After redundant items within each category and items unrelated to presbycusis were eliminated, only 56 items remained. These 56 items were regrouped into four subcategories – general issues, distracting conditions, fast-rate speech, and working memory – which represent the most common problems for those with presbycusis.11,25 A preliminary version of the questionnaire was evaluated and revised by audiologists and gerontologists. Finally, the questionnaire, named the Self-assessment for Hearing Screening of the Elderly (SHSE), was developed having in mind the valid concerns of the elderly, such as being too time-consuming and them having too short an attention span. SHSE consists of 20 items under four subcategories: seven under general issues, seven under distracting conditions, two under fast-rate speech, and four under working memory. General issues include ordinary problems caused by sensorineural hearing loss such as loudness, information from high-frequency sound, clear speech, talker familiarity, speech understanding, and auditory feedback. Distracting conditions include hearing difficulty in poor listening situations such as with background noise, reverberation, a multitalker environment, and conditions without visual cues. Fast-rate speech refers to the difficulty of understanding speech when a talker speaks a little too fast. Finally, working memory represents the short-term memory ability in long and rehearsable listening situations. The respondent’s task was to choose from a five-point response scale to indicate the number of occasions for which the statement was true. Each point consisted of both a descriptor and an associated percentage: never (0%), occasionally (25%), half the time (50%), almost always (75%), and always (100%). In the scoring process, the responses for these items were reversed so that all items with a high percentage score indicated a high possibility of problems due to presbycusis. Table S1 shows the questionnaire developed in the present study.

Participants

Eighty-three elderly subjects (54 males and 29 females) from the Chuncheon community volunteered to participate in this study. Their average age was 77.33 years, and the age range was 68–84 years. They all passed the normal criteria of the Korean version of the Mini Mental State Examination (MMSE-K).26 Also, the participants reported no history of ear surgery, head trauma, or any other age-related chronic disease. After the hearing screening, otoscopy examination, tympanometry, and pure-tone audiometry were conducted, the subjects were then classified into four groups based on their degree of hearing loss in decibels (dB HL; average threshold of 0.5, 1, 2 kHz).27 Among them, 25, 22, 23, and 13 participants were designated as normal hearing, mild, moderate, and moderate-to-severe sensorineural hearing loss, respectively. All subjects were native Korean speakers and signed an informed consent form before the experimental process began. After finishing the experiments, they were awarded US$30 for their participation. All procedures were approved by the Institutional Review Board of Hallym University (#HIRB-2015-012).

Experiment procedure

After completing the hearing screening tests, all participants were asked to respond to the 20 items on the SHSE. The questionnaire was administered again 3 weeks later by the same researcher to evaluate test–retest reliability. To measure the validity of the SHSE, three hearing tests were also conducted. First, to evaluate speech perception ability in a noisy listening situation, the Korean Speech Perception in Noise28 was performed at the subject’s most comfortable level of +3 dB signal-to-noise ratio with babble noise. Forty sentences were presented via a recorded CD and scored by percentage. Second, sentence materials from the Korean Speech Audiometry29 were used to estimate speech perception ability in a fast-rate speech condition. A 30% time-compressed condition was created by using Adobe Audition (Version 5.0; Adobe Systems, Inc., San Jose, CA, USA), and then the root mean square was applied to adjust the amplitude of each sentence. Also, 40 compressed sentences were presented to all subjects via recorded CD and scored by percentage. Third, the working memory function was assessed using a forward digit span test, which consisted of a string of consequent numbers from 0 to 9 in random order. The subject was asked to repeat the strings, and a tester determined a threshold at the level at which the subject committed two errors out of three attempts.

Statistical analysis

The statistical analysis was performed using SPSS software (Version 20; IBM Corporation, Armonk, NY, USA). To see a significant group difference in pure-tone average (PTA) and word recognition scores (WRS) for the four experimental groups, an analysis of variance was conducted and Scheffe multiple comparisons were applied. To confirm the internal consistency of SHSE, Cronbach’s α was used as an estimate of the reliability analysis. Pearson correlation analysis was used to measure test–retest reliability (test scores vs retest scores in the SHSE total), convergent validity (SHSE total scores vs PTA and WRS), and construct validity (SHSE and its subcategories vs three hearing tests). In the final analysis, the items were subjected to confirmatory factor analysis with principal axis factoring and varimax.

Results

Hearing threshold of subjects

Table 1 shows a summary of demographic data and hearing status including PTA and WRS among the four groups. A significant difference existed in PTA (F[3, 82] =283.512; P=0.000) and WRS (F[3, 82] =23.594; P=0.000) among the groups when using one-way analysis of variance. The mean of both PTA and WRS showed a significant group difference when Scheffe multiple comparisons were applied (P<0.05; Table 1).
Table 1

Demographic data and hearing status in four experimental groups

VariableNormal hearing (n=25)Mild hearing loss (n=22)Moderate hearing loss (n=23)Moderate to severe (n=13)
Age, years, mean ± SD71.4±5.1273.4±6.172.8±5.175.2±5.1
Sex
 Female, n (%)11 (44)7 (31.9)7 (30.4)4 (30.8)
 Male, n (%)14 (56)15 (68.1)16 (69.6)9 (69.2)
Hearing status
 PTA, dB, mean ± SD17.80±5.4432.42±3.7348.33±4.8461.80±5.75
 WRS, %, mean ± SD95.68±4.4690.55±6.1579.52±15.6160.31±23.94

Abbreviations: SD, standard deviation; PTA, pure-tone average; WRS, word recognition score.

Reliability of SHSE

Internal consistency

SHSE total scores showed a Cronbach’s α as high as 0.96, indicating high internal consistency. Each category of SHSE items was also calculated by Cronbach’s α. General issues, distracting conditions, fast-rate speech, and working memory were 0.87, 0.87, 0.75, and 0.80, respectively. This result confirmed that the four SHSE subcategories measure homogeneous content.

Test–retest reliability

Both SHSE’s total scores and its subcategories showed significant test–retest reliability (r=0.76–0.85; P=0.000), which indicated SHSE is a stable and consistent measurement even as time passes (Table 2).
Table 2

Test–retest correlation of each subcategory and total scores (n=83)

Test-retestSelf-assessment of Hearing Screening of the Elderly
General issuesDistracting conditionsFast-rate speechWorking memoryTotal
Correlation0.85*0.84*0.77*0.76*0.81*

Note:

P<0.005.

Validity of SHSE

Convergent validity

A high positive correlation existed between SHSE total scores and PTA (r=0.83; P=0.000), and a high negative correlation existed between SHSE total scores and WRS (r=−0.71; P=0.000). That is, the SHSE scores can substitute for PTA and WRS, which typically estimate the degree of hearing loss in the clinic. A significant difference of SHSE total scores existed in the groups for test (F[3, 82] =28.709; P=0.000) and retest (F[3, 82] =26.842; P=0.000). In other words, as hearing loss increased, SHSE scores significantly increased. When applied for Scheffe multiple comparisons, the scores of the normal hearing group were significantly lower than those of the three hearing-impaired groups. The scores of the mild hearing-impaired group significantly differed from those of the moderate and moderate-to-severe groups. However, no significant difference appeared in scores between the moderate and moderate-to-severe groups (P>0.05). Figure 1 illustrates the average percentage of SHSE total items in the four groups. Under test conditions, the normal hearing, mild, moderate, and moderate-to-severe groups scored 42.24% (standard deviation [SD] =11.19), 55.27% (SD =10.36), 66.61% (SD =17.06), and 78.15% (SD =7.03), respectively. Also, for the retest condition, the four groups showed similar results, 43.00% (SD =13.52), 55.91% (SD =13.29), 69.65% (SD =16.92), and 81.15% (SD =8.47).
Figure 1

Mean comparison of test and retest scores for SHSE as a function of degree of hearing loss.

Notes: As hearing loss increases, both SHSE test scores and retest scores increased, yet there was no significant difference in scores between the two test times. *statistically significant differences (P<0.005).

Abbreviation: SHSE, Self-assessment of Hearing Screening of the Elderly.

Construct validity

SHSE and its subcategories were used to analyze the correlation among scores of speech in noise, time-compressed speech, and forward digit span. They showed a high negative correlation with speech perception ability in noise (r=−0.50 to −0.68). This suggested that SHSE displayed higher scores as speech perception ability in noise deteriorated. Also, SHSE and its subcategories showed a moderately negative correlation with speech perception in fast-rate speech (r=−0.37 to −0.55), indicating that higher SHSE yielded lower scores for time-compressed speech. However, SHSE and its subcategories did not show a statistically significant correlation with the results of forward digit span (Table 3).
Table 3

Pearson correlation between each subcategory and total scores and results for three hearing tests (n=83)

Hearing testsSelf-assessment of Hearing Screening of the Elderly
General issuesDistracting conditionsFast-rate speechWorking memoryTotal
Speech in noise−0.68*−0.56*−0.50*−0.50*−0.61*
Compressed speech−0.55*−0.48*−0.52*−0.37*−0.54*
Digit span−0.05−0.04−0.02−0.21−0.13

Note:

P<0.005.

Factor analysis of SHSE

Since the Kaiser–Meyer–Olkin measure of the sampling adequacy ratio of SHSE total items was 0.90, SHSE was quite appropriate for exploring the factor structure.30 While using principal axis factoring and varimax, the confirmatory factor analysis resulted in three factors. First, when applying the eigenvalue to determine the number of factors, three factors yielded 9.24 (factor 1), 1.45 (factor 2), 1.25 (factor 3), and the rest had an eigenvalue <1. Each factor revealed the variance as 46.18% for factor 1, 7.25% for factor 2, and 6.25% for factor 3. All three factors accounted for 59.67% of the variance (Table 4).
Table 4

Total variance explained for three components of Self-assessment of Hearing Screening of the Elderly

ComponentInitial eigenvalues
Rotation sums of squared loadings
Total% of varianceCumulative %Total% of varianceCumulative %
19.23546.17746.1776.01030.05230.052
21.4497.24653.4223.60018.00148.053
31.2506.25159.6732.32411.62059.673
As a result of the factor analysis, the factor for distracting conditions consisted of ten items: six from the original category of distracting conditions, one from the general issues category, one from the working memory category, and two from the fast-rate speech category. The factor of general issues included all items from the original category of general issues, except for one item from the original distracting conditions category. The factor of working memory included three of four items from the previous categories (Table 5).
Table 5

Three-factor solution of the 20 items of Self-assessment of Hearing Screening of the Elderly

FactorNumberItemFactor
123
Factor 1: distracting conditions
F16Do you ask a communication partner to speak slowly because you feel his or her speech is too fast?0.790
G2Do you have difficulty hearing environmental sounds such as birds singing or water flowing?0.739
D14Do you have difficulty understanding speech in dark places?0.680
D13Do you have difficulty understanding speech on the phone?0.660
D8Do you have trouble understanding announcements on a bus or subway?0.642
D10Do you have difficulty understanding speech in a concert hall or theater due to reverberation?0.6370.433
D9Do you have trouble talking with people in noisy environments such as restaurants or department stores?0.612
W18Do you ask a partner to repeat what he or she said during a conversation?0.609
F15Do you feel that speech on the TV or radio is too fast?0.595
D12Do you miss hearing the sound of the doorbell when a guest visits your house?0.516
Factor 2: general issues
G6Do you wish to increase the TV’s volume level when watching it with your family?0.782
G7Does a partner tell you that your voice is too loud when you speak?0.707
G1Do you have difficulty understanding when someone talks in a whisper?0.695
G5Do you often misunderstand what someone says?0.595
D11Do you have difficulty understanding the conversation when several people talk at the same time?0.590
G4Do you have difficulty understanding the speech of an unfamiliar person when compared to a familiar person?0.566
G3Do you have difficulty understanding speech because a partner murmurs or the speech is not clear?0.560
Factor 3: working memory
W20Do you have trouble remembering what you just said?0.825
W17Do you have trouble remembering the introductory part after listening to a long lecture?0.724
W19Do you forget the location of an object to be bought after asking for its location in a market?0.684
The item that had the highest factor loading for each factor is referred to as representative. The representative item describes the given factor well. For instance, the representative item for factor 1, distracting conditions, was number 16: “Do you ask a communication partner to speak slowly because you feel his or her speech is too fast?” For factor 2 of the general issues, the representative item was number 6: “Do you wish to increase the TV’s volume level when watching it with your family?” The representative item for factor 3, working memory, was number 20: “Do you have trouble remembering what you just said?” (Table 5). Interestingly, item number 10 was associated with both factors 1 and 2. However, because the result of the varimax rotation supported factor 1, the item is adequate for distracting conditions.

Discussion

Many developed countries estimate that presbycusis affects approximately 40% of the population older than 75 years.2,31 Health professionals anticipate that its prevalence will increase rapidly in the near future due to longer lives resulting from improved nutrition and greater access to health care.31,32 To respect their independence and reduce their financial burden, elderly people should have an easy and convenient opportunity to check themselves for their degree of hearing loss. The results from the self-assessment questionnaire will help them when they meet with health professionals and potentially give them access to early intervention and rehabilitation.33 According to the present study, the psychometric properties of SHSE appear to be acceptable because of good internal consistency and high test–retest reliability. Also, total SHSE scores corresponded highly to data obtained from the hearing test battery that has traditionally been used in the clinic, such as PTA and WRS, in terms of convergent and predictive validity. In particular, the scores of item number 1 (loudness), item number 3 (clear speech), item number 17 (working memory in listening), and item number 20 (working memory in speaking) systematically increased as hearing loss was greater. These results suggest, as we expected, that elderly listeners very often experience significant difficulty with noise,9 even though they have little difficulty in understanding speech in a quiet environment. When adding hearing loss, the aging effect is much worse for detecting and discriminating noise-masked acoustical cues such as consonants that have the energy of high frequencies.34 Consequently, it is effortful or tiring for the elderly to communicate with others in everyday life when surrounded by various types and levels of environmental noise.9 In addition, elderly people exhibit poor temporal processing in fast-rate speech tasks.35 Those factors, which are displayed in the items of distracting condition (factor 1), showed high statistical validity and marked characteristics of age-related hearing loss in the SHSE scores. Although there are only three items, working memory (factor 3), which is a cognitive function for speech recognition in the elderly, showed another feature of presbycusis. Vaughan and Letowski36 suggested that cognitive slowing may cause a reduced ability to perform the working memory function that processes incoming speech signals and to utilize its storage capacity. Cohen37 supported this opinion, asserting that in the peripheral and central auditory systems necessary for speech recognition, an overload of the function of working memory can contribute to the difficulties elderly people experience. Because hearing ability draws heavily on the working memory function responsible for both processing and temporary storage of information during the performance of cognitive tasks, one might expect age-related deficits in working memory capacity to have a different effect depending on the degree of hearing loss.9 In conclusion, the three factors of SHSE directly reflect the degree of presbycusis. However, some limitations that warrant further study need explanation. For example, there was no significant difference in SHSE scores between moderate and moderate-to-severe hearing loss groups. The group with moderate-to-severe hearing loss might not have had enough members to show mean comparisons equally. In addition, because the total sample size is small for factor analysis regardless of whether there is good sampling adequacy or not, one cannot overlook the results of the current study. Second, our data showed no correlation between SHSE scores and the forward digit span test. Although the digit span scores can quantify the ability of working memory in the elderly because of significantly differentiating elderly subjects from young subjects,38 other measures should be added to support our results and evaluate working memory for elderly people with presbycusis. Third, factor analysis revealed that two items in the fast-rate speech category moved into distracting conditions. We need to discover why these items switched to another factor. This might be explained by the number of items being small. As another possibility, fast-rate speech is likely to be one of the factors in the distracting conditions, similar to noise, reverberation, and multitalker listening.35 Fourth, since we designed the test to classify the degree of hearing loss based on SHSE scores in hearing-impaired elderly people, we did not compare the scores with other previously developed self-reporting questionnaires in terms of concurrent validity. We expect that they will have a low correlation due to their different goals and contents; however, such a comparison will reinforce the current version of SHSE and also provide a better understanding of the nature of hearing impairment in elderly people. If possible, research should be extended to predict the hearing threshold at specific frequencies in presbycusis, as done in Hannula et al’s study,39 where they found a good correlation between self-reported hearing difficulties of patients with hyperausis and audiometric results of 4–8 kHz. Finally, a part of the statement in a few items should be modified because it was not appropriate to the culture or lifestyle of elderly people and required repetition or additional explanation during the experiment. Despite the limitations mentioned, the paper-and-pencil profile can usually be completed in 7–10 minutes with 20 critical statements that yield a five-point scale quantifying the degree of hearing loss. Thus, SHSE seems well suited for application in the elderly people who want to evaluate themselves for hearing loss. Indeed, it is important to keep in mind that SHSE has been purposefully developed as a hearing screening tool for the elderly. Since the SHSE does not assess the social and emotional consequences of age-related hearing loss or the underlying personality attributes that might influence responses to a hearing impairment, in a further study, other questionnaires might accompany this one to measure comprehensively the problems of the elderly. We expect that continued study of responses from elderly people with presbycusis will provide numerous potential applications for SHSE. For example, SHSE can be translated into several languages for high utility globally. It is also accessible to the elderly via an online version, providing accurate scores and appropriate direction regarding the need to meet with health professionals and access to early intervention and rehabilitation.33 Self-assessment for Hearing Screening of the Elderly
Table S1

Self-assessment for Hearing Screening of the Elderly

ItemStatementNever (0%)Occasionally (25%)Half the time (50%)Almost always (70%)Always (100%)
1Do you have difficulty understanding when someone talks in a whisper?
2Do you have difficulty hearing environmental sounds such as birds singing or water flowing?
3Do you have difficulty understanding speech because a partner murmurs or the speech is not clear?
4Do you have difficulty understanding the speech of an unfamiliar person when compared to a familiar person?
5Do you often misunderstand what someone says?
6Do you wish to increase the TV’s volume level when watching it with your family?
7Does a partner tell you that your voice is too loud when you speak?
8Do you have trouble understanding announcements on a bus or subway?
9Do you have trouble talking with people in noisy environments such as restaurants or department stores?
10Do you have difficulty understanding speech in a concert hall or theater due to reverberation?
11Do you have difficulty understanding the conversation when several people talk at the same time?
12Do you miss hearing the sound of the doorbell when a guest visits your house?
13Do you have difficulty understanding speech on the phone?
14Do you have difficulty understanding speech in dark places?
15Do you feel that speech on the TV or radio is too fast?
16Do you ask a communication partner to speak slowly because you feel his or her speech is too fast?
17Do you have trouble remembering the introductory part after listening to a long lecture?
18Do you ask a partner to repeat what he or she said during a conversation?
19Do you forget the location of an object to be bought after asking for its location in a market?
20Do you have trouble remembering what you just said?
Direction: Please circle the answer of each item that comes closest to your everyday experience while considering its percentage from 0% to 100%.
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1.  The International Outcome Inventory for Hearing Aids (IOI-HA): psychometric properties of the English version.

Authors:  Robyn M Cox; Genevieve C Alexander
Journal:  Int J Audiol       Date:  2002-01       Impact factor: 2.117

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Review 3.  Ageing and hearing loss.

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Authors:  Teresa C Cervera; Maria J Soler; Carmen Dasi; Juan C Ruiz
Journal:  Can J Exp Psychol       Date:  2009-09

5.  Hearing loss prevalence and risk factors among older adults in the United States.

Authors:  Frank R Lin; Roland Thorpe; Sandra Gordon-Salant; Luigi Ferrucci
Journal:  J Gerontol A Biol Sci Med Sci       Date:  2011-02-27       Impact factor: 6.053

6.  Client Oriented Scale of Improvement (COSI) and its relationship to several other measures of benefit and satisfaction provided by hearing aids.

Authors:  H Dillon; A James; J Ginis
Journal:  J Am Acad Audiol       Date:  1997-02       Impact factor: 1.664

Review 7.  Speech perception in older adults: the importance of speech-specific cognitive abilities.

Authors:  M S Sommers
Journal:  J Am Geriatr Soc       Date:  1997-05       Impact factor: 5.562

Review 8.  Speech understanding and aging. Working Group on Speech Understanding and Aging. Committee on Hearing, Bioacoustics, and Biomechanics, Commission on Behavioral and Social Sciences and Education, National Research Council.

Authors: 
Journal:  J Acoust Soc Am       Date:  1988-03       Impact factor: 1.840

Review 9.  Hearing loss and aging: new research findings and clinical implications.

Authors:  Sandra Gordon-Salant
Journal:  J Rehabil Res Dev       Date:  2005 Jul-Aug

Review 10.  Prevalence of age-related hearing loss in Europe: a review.

Authors:  Thomas Niklaus Roth; Dirk Hanebuth; Rudolf Probst
Journal:  Eur Arch Otorhinolaryngol       Date:  2011-04-17       Impact factor: 2.503

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Authors:  Sunghwa You; Woojae Han; Saea Kim; Sanga Maeng; Young Joon Seo
Journal:  Clin Interv Aging       Date:  2020-01-17       Impact factor: 4.458

Review 2.  Validated Smartphone-Based Apps for Ear and Hearing Assessments: A Review.

Authors:  Tess Bright; Danuk Pallawela
Journal:  JMIR Rehabil Assist Technol       Date:  2016-12-23

3.  Construction and Evaluation of a High-Frequency Hearing Loss Screening Tool for Community Residents.

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