| Literature DB >> 27574602 |
Maia Ingram1, Nicole Marrone2, Daisey Thalia Sanchez2, Alicia Sander3, Cecilia Navarro3, Jill Guernsey de Zapien1, Sonia Colina4, Frances Harris2.
Abstract
UNLABELLED: Hearing loss is associated with cognitive decline and impairment in daily living activities. Access to hearing health care has broad implications for healthy aging of the U.S. POPULATION: This qualitative study investigated factors related to the socio-ecological domains of hearing health in a U.S.-Mexico border community experiencing disparities in access to care. A multidisciplinary research team partnered with community health workers (CHWs) from a Federally Qualified Health Center (FQHC) in designing the study. CHWs conducted interviews with people with hearing loss (n = 20) and focus groups with their family/friends (n = 27) and with members of the community-at-large (n = 47). The research team conducted interviews with FQHC providers and staff (n = 12). Individuals experienced depression, sadness, and social isolation, as well as frustration and even anger regarding communication. Family members experienced negative impacts of deteriorating communication, but expressed few coping strategies. There was general agreement across data sources that hearing loss was not routinely addressed within primary care and assistive hearing technology was generally unaffordable. Community members described stigma related to hearing loss and a need for greater access to hearing health care and broader community education. Findings confirm the causal sequence of hearing impairment on quality of life aggravated by socioeconomic conditions and lack of access to hearing health care. Hearing loss requires a comprehensive and innovative public health response across the socio-ecological framework that includes both individual communication intervention and greater access to hearing health resources. CHWs can be effective in tailoring intervention strategies to community characteristics.Entities:
Keywords: aging; community health workers; community-based participatory research; health disparities; hearing loss; socio-ecological model
Year: 2016 PMID: 27574602 PMCID: PMC4983703 DOI: 10.3389/fpubh.2016.00169
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Front Public Health ISSN: 2296-2565
Data collection activities related to socio-ecological model domains.
| Intrapersonal: HOH | Interpersonal: family/friends | Organization: FQHC providers | Community: Nogales | Community: Nogales |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Interviews ( | Focus groups ( | Interviews ( | Focus groups ( | Hearing screening ( |
|
CHWs recruited HOH individuals over 50 years of age from hearing screenings. CHWs conducted 20 interviews that explored the experience of living with hearing loss, perceived response of family members, community resources and access to care. |
CHWs invited family members of HOH individuals who participated in interviews to focus groups. CHWs led three focus groups regarding experience as a communication partner to someone with hearing loss, coping strategies, and efforts to access hearing health care. |
FQHC staff contacted primary care providers, medical assistants and local hearing aid dispenser. Audiology faculty interviewed 12 providers on perspectives on hearing loss among patients, standards of care, perceptions of patient and family response to hearing health issues and access to care. |
CHWs recruited individuals from clinic and health promotion programs. CHW-led 5 focus groups with 8–10 participants regarding perceptions and experiences of hearing loss, community resources and access to care. |
CHWs advertised free screenings at the clinic and in the community. Audiology faculty conducted 2 full-day hearing loss screenings and made referrals to primary care doctor for follow up. |
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Recommendations for a comprehensive public health response to hearing loss.
| Domain | Key findings | Recommended intervention strategies |
|---|---|---|
| Individual (intrapersonal) |
Social isolation/withdrawal Emotional distress Denial of hearing loss Adaptation to improve hearing Challenges such as driving, talking on the phone Language barriers, cost, and distance from specialists affect access to care |
Culturally tailored audiologic rehabilitation intervention that focuses on strategies to improve communication for those with hearing loss regardless of access to hearing aids. Self-advocacy training to increase access to audiology services, self-efficacy, and social support for hearing loss. |
| Family/friends (Interpersonal) |
Conflict related to hearing loss Concern over changes in personality of person with hearing loss Motivation to seek help Proactive and reactive adaptation to hearing loss Gathering collective resources to seek care, address hearing loss |
Culturally tailored audiological rehabilitation intervention for communication partners who stress mutual responsibility for strategies to reduce conflict and improve communication-related quality of life. Develop support systems for family members. |
| Health-care provider(organization) |
Hearing screening not part of regular care. Challenges in patient–provider communication. Lack of provider expertise and equipment. Low interest and delays in referring patients for hearing tests when patient cannot afford out-of-pocket expense of intervention. Lack of awareness of hearing interventions and rehabilitation beyond hearing aids. |
Provide training to medical staff in communication strategies. Develop screening protocols for hearing loss. Provide amplification technology (pocket talkers) for medical visits. Increase FQHC capacity to conduct hearing tests and support self-management of hearing and communication health. Create continuity of care in hearing health care. |
| Community (Nogales) |
Acceptance of the problems of hearing loss as part of aging. Lack of hearing health resources. Lack of peer support for hearing loss and its management. Need for community-level information. |
Train FQHC CHWs to recognize hearing loss and include communication strategies into health promotion efforts. Advocate for the increased use of assistive listening devices in community settings. Implement a community campaign about solutions to living with hearing loss. Develop a used hearing aid bank to increase hearing aids and recruit audiologists/dispensers to provide fitting services. |
| Policy |
Medicaid/Medicare does not cover hearing aids or rehabilitative services for adults in Arizona. Hearing and other communication disorders not monitored within state-wide surveillance systems. |
Improve access to hearing health care for underserved populations including minority and rural older adults. Include hearing health within state-level public health surveillance. |