| Literature DB >> 27669699 |
Tina Hu1,2, Katherine Stead3, Terence Fu3, Blake Papsin3,4.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Hearing deficits in children are demonstrably negatively associated with language acquisition and cognition. Although universal neonatal hearing screening exists, it is not offered equally across Canada. Additionally, children emigrating from other countries are often not assessed. The objective of this study is to evaluate Kids2Hear, a free hearing screening program run by medical students at elementary schools, and to determine the rate of hearing deficits that were identified and referred for evaluation.Entities:
Keywords: ENT; Family practice/general practice/primary care; Medical education; Pediatrics
Year: 2016 PMID: 27669699 PMCID: PMC5037649 DOI: 10.1186/s40463-016-0159-x
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Otolaryngol Head Neck Surg ISSN: 1916-0208
School and demographic information
| School 1 | School 2 | School 3 | |
|---|---|---|---|
| Total number of students | 382 | 324 | 257 |
| Gender | 55 % male | 48 % male | 49 % male |
| Primary language other than English | 43 % | 78 % | 44 % |
| Students living in Canada for 2 years or less | 3 % | 4 % | 6 % |
| Students living in Canada for 3–5 years | 6 % | 3 % | 5 % |
| Total number of students screened in Kids2Hear program | 47 | 94 | 87 |
| Gender of students screened in Kids2Hear program | 47 % male | 43 % male | 55 % male |
| Audiological evaluation needed | 15 % | 12 % | 3 % |
| Family medicine referral needed | 13 % | 7 % | 36 % |
Information obtained from the Toronto District School Board school profiles [9]
Demographic information for areas surrounding schools
| Ward A (School 1 and 3) | Ward B (School 2) | Toronto | |
|---|---|---|---|
| Annual household income | $67,305 | $60, 550 | $87,038 |
| Proportion with household income less than $20,000 | 15 % | 23 % | 15 % |
| Incidence of low income households | 23 % | 20 % | 19 % |
| Born outside of Canada | 41 % | 59 % | 51 % |
| Unemployment rate | 9.1 | 10 | 9.3 |
| No high school diploma | 16 % | 36 % | 18 % |
| Proportion of visible minorities | 33 % | 54 % | 49 % |
A “ward” is one of the sections into which a city is divided for political/electoral purposes
Information obtained from Statistics Canada, National Household Survey (2011) [16]
Program evaluation data
| Total | Male | Female | |
|---|---|---|---|
| Number of participants | 228 | 109 (48 %) | 119 (52 %) |
| Audiological evaluation needed | 21 (9.3 %) | 4 (19 %) | 17 (81 %)** |
| Family medicine referral needed | 44 (19 %) | 15 (34 %) | 29 (66 %)* |
*p < 0.05
**p < 0.01
Reasons for referral
| Clinical diagnoses | Number of referrals |
|---|---|
| Occluding cerumen | 29 (64.4 %) |
| Effusion (mucoid or serous) | 11 (24.4 %) |
| Acute otitis media | 1 (2.2 %) |
| Tympanic perforation | 2 (4.4 %) |
| Tympanosclerosis | 1 (2.2 %) |
| Canal edema and discharge | 1 (2.2 %) |