| Literature DB >> 30466413 |
Khalid M Khan1, Sylvanna L Bielko2, Marjorie C McCullagh3.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Many youth and young adults experience high noise exposure compounded by lack of access to hearing health education. Although the need for hearing health education programs is evident, the efficacy of these programs for youth is unclear. We evaluated the literature for efficacy of various hearing conservation programs aimed at youth and young adults, and analyzed their strengths and limitations.Entities:
Keywords: Educational intervention; Hearing conservation; Rural and agricultural communities; Systematic review; Technology; Young adults; Youth
Mesh:
Year: 2018 PMID: 30466413 PMCID: PMC6249850 DOI: 10.1186/s12889-018-6198-7
Source DB: PubMed Journal: BMC Public Health ISSN: 1471-2458 Impact factor: 3.295
Fig. 1Selection Process for Identification of the Studies for Review
Summary of Selected Characteristics of Reviewed Studies (n = 10)
| Publication country | Study design | Study objective | Sample eligibility of participants | How participants were allocated to groups | Use of control group(s) | Instruments for outcome measurement |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Reed et al. (2001) [ | Quasi-experimental crossover design | To test the effectiveness of two sets of instructional materials on farm safety designed through participatory action research involving teachers and students. AgDARE experiential learning curriculum on four disabilities including hearing loss was used. AgDARE used stories told by farmers with disability because of poor safety behavior. | Adolescents aged 14–16 years (9th and 10th graders) from 21 high schools located in rural and agricultural communities in three states ( | Two intervention groups had 373 participants and 417 were enrolled in the control group. | Yes | Students completed the Farm Safety Attitude (FSA) instrument and the Stages of Change (SOC) at both pre and one year post ntervention phases |
| Lee et al. (2004) [ | Cluster randomized controlled trial | To evaluate a rural health & safety initiative implemented in 4000 National FFA (formerly Future Farmers of America) Chapters across the United States. | Rural high school students from 123 FFA chapters ( | Standard intervention, enhanced intervention and control groups had 1059, 683 and 1339 participants respectively. | Yes | Students reported safety knowledge, safety consciousness, self-reported leadership, dangerous risk-taking, self-esteem, safety campaign participation, injury experiences at pre and academic year 1 and 2 post-intervention. |
| Joseph et al. (2007) [ | Quasi-experimental without control (randomization & manipulation; controlled behavior intervention trial) | To compare the effect of small-group training on the attenuation performance of passive insert-type HPDs with individual training. To compare the results of formal training with no training. | College students from both rural and urban communities ( | Each of the four HPD training groups had 25 participants who were randomly assigned into groups. | No | Participants were evaluated for real-ear attenuation at threshold (REAT) at third-octave noise band between 125 and 8000 Hz. REAT measurements were augmented by the use of Hearing Loss Prevention Attitude-Belief (HLPAB) survey. |
| Berg et al. (2009) [ | Cluster randomized controlled trial | To determine whether a hearing conservation program for youth involved in farm work resulted in (i) reduced prevalence of NIHL at 3-year follow up and/or (ii) an increased use of HPD when compared with controls. | Rural school students enrolled in 7th to 9th grades and actively and regularly involved in farm tasks ( | Intervention and control groups had 378 and 375 students respectively from 34 schools at baseline although 690 were available at follow-up. | Yes | Primary outcome measures were audiometric threshold changes from baseline to the 3-year follow-up whereas secondary outcome measure was self-reported use of HPD using a three point Likert-type scale (never, sometimes, and always). |
| Kotowski et al. (2011) [ | Randomized experimental study with two group post-test only design | To determine if brochures developed on the risks of NIHL using the Extended Parallel Process Model (EPPM) increased intentions to use HPDs for college students. | Undergraduate college students exposed to noises from sporting and recreational sources ( | Subjects were randomly put into intervention ( | Yes | Participants reported perceptions of hearing loss threat, efficacy to use earplugs and intentions to use earplugs when in loud environments. |
| Marlenga et al. (2011) [ | Cluster randomized controlled trial | To assess whether a hearing conservation program for youth involved in farm work resulted in reduced prevalence of NIHL and sustained HPD use compared with a concurrent control group at the 16-year follow-up period. | Young adults (at 16-year follow-up) who were high or middle school students located in rural and agricultural communities at baseline ( | Children from 17 intervention school and equal number of control schools were available at the follow-up. Intervention and control groups had 200 and 192 participants respectively during follow-up data collection. | Yes | Self-reported use of HPD for each recreational and occupational categories was used as the primary outcome measures. Audiometric outcome measures were threshold changes from baseline to 16-year follow-up in (1) individual frequencies, (2) OSHA standard threshold shift, (3) low frequency average, (4) high-frequency average, and (5) the bulge depth statistic. |
| Martin et al. (2013) [ | Experimental study with randomized selection of groups | To evaluate the sustainable impacts of four different types of interpersonal and interactive educational interventions on NIHL prevention from baseline to immediate post-intervention and follow-up. | Children from 53 fourth grade classrooms participated in the study ( | Classrooms were randomly placed into four experimental and one no-intervention groups. Number of classrooms (children) analyzed: older peer 13 (272), health educator 10 (209), on site museums 9 (185), web-based 15 (322), and no-intervention 6 (125). | Yes | Knowledge, attitudes and intended behaviors regarding sound exposure and use of appropriate hearing protection strategies were the outcome measures assessed via questionnaire survey. |
| Gilles et al. (2014) [ | Quasi-experimental one-group pre/post test | To examine if a preventive campaign can alter attitudes toward noise and enhance the use of HPD among adolescents. | Flemish high school students ( | Not applicable as only one group was observed before and after intervention. | No | Youth attitudes and beliefs were assessed by the use of youth attitudes toward noise scale (YANS) and the beliefs about hearing protection and hearing loss (BAHPHL) questionnaire respectively. Self-reported hearing protection was also recorded. |
| Keppler et al. (2015) [ | Experimental study with one group | To evaluate the effects of a hearing education program on recreational noise exposure, attitudes and beliefs toward noise, hearing loss, and HPD use after approximately 6 months following training. | Young adults ( | Not applicable as only one group was observed at pre and post training. | No | Hearing status was determined by admittances measures, pure-tone audiometry, and registration of otoacoustic emissions (OAEs). |
| Khan et al. (2018) [ | Experimental study with cluster randomization | To evaluate the efficacy of low-cost technology-based approaches to enhance hearing conservation knowledge and attitude and the use of HPD among adolescent farm workers. | High school students living in rural and agricultural communities ( | Six schools were divided into three clusters and then each cluster randomly received a specific format of intervention. Adolescents were randomly recruited from each school. Fifty students from three groups were available at six-week post intervention. | No | Self-reported hearing conservation knowledge, attitude and use of hearing protection during noisy tasks in agriculture. |
NIHL Noise-induced hearing loss, HPD Hearing protection device
Characteristics of Interventions and Major Findings
| Publication | Intervention intended for each group of youth | Findings on the efficacy of interventions | Limitations in methodology and data interpretation |
|---|---|---|---|
| Reed et al. (2001) [ | 1) Narrative simulations based on stories on farm activities and 2) Simulations of farm tasks while students pretended to have a disability | AgDARE curriculum improved safety attitude and behavior | • Long-term impact on hearing protection use was examined only in small a subset of adolescents. |
| Lee et al. (2004) [ | 1) Standard intervention group participated in 10 educational activities on farm safety including interactive training, printed and electronic materials, discussions on activities in national forum and writing information for newsletter and 2) Enhanced intervention group participated in all standard activities and additionally received telephone calls, mailings, personal contacts and free personal protective equipment. | Nationwide program based in FFA did not result in changes in agricultural safety knowledge, attitudes, leadership, self-concept, or injuries. Program also failed to develop sustainable community partnership. | • Intervention fidelity was poor. |
| Joseph et al. (2007) [ | 1) Small-group training on the attenuation performance of formable HPD, 2) small-group training on the attenuation performance of premolded HPD, 3) individual training on the attenuation performance of formable HPD and 4) individual training on the attenuation performance of premolded HPD. | Both group and individual training formats demonstrated significant effect both types of HPDs on attenuation and attitude but the difference in attenuation between group and individual training was not significant. | • There was no follow-up data collection and therefore, no evidence of sustained learning was obtained. |
| Berg et al. (2009) [ | Hearing conservation program comprised of (i) classroom instruction at each school, (ii) distribution of HPD, (iii) direct mailings to the student’s home, (iv) noise level assessments at the student’s home, and (v) yearly audiometric testing. | Students in the hearing conservation intervention group reported more frequent HPD use but no post-intervention evidence of reduced levels of NIHL was observed. | • Since NIHL is cumulative, a 3-year study was likely not long enough to evaluate the efficacy of this intervention. |
| Kotowski et al. (2011) [ | Brochure developed on the threats, severity and susceptibility of NIHL and efficacy of behaviors that can minimize the threats. | Viewing brochure improved perception of NIHL and efficacy to use earplugs without changing intention of HPD use. | • Convenience sampling approach was used |
| Marlenga et al. (2011) [ | Described above*. | Participants from the intervention group reported significantly higher use of HPDs in agricultural activities and greater use of HPDs for shooting guns than the controls. For other activities, both groups reported similar uses of HPDs. | • The study lacked power when compared with parent study*. |
| Martin et al. (2013) [ | 1) Classroom presentation by older-peer educators (high school students), 2) classroom presentation by health professional educators (school nurses), 3) on-site museum visits interaction with a museum exhibition on NIHL and tinnitus prevention, and 4) virtual museum experience via internet. | Positive effects in knowledge, attitude and behavior in all formats of interventions were observed. In terms of effectiveness, the classroom programs were more effective than the internet-based virtual exhibit, which was more effective than the visit to the museum exhibition. Interpersonal, interactive educational interventions such as the classroom program are more effective and have longer impact than self-directed learning experiences for NIHL and tinnitus prevention. | • Detail information about the process of randomization was not provided. |
| Gilles et al. (2014) [ | A governmental prevention campaign ‘Anything less is the max’ targeting high school students via television and radio commercials, social media, posters and interactive website was used. Major emphasis of the intervention was placed on loud music, controlled use of personal listening devices and prevention approaches at other noisy situations. | Scores on the youth attitudes towards noise scale (YANS) and the beliefs about hearing protection and hearing loss (BAHPHL) decreased significantly after intervention. Hearing protection use increased significantly from pre to post intervention. Use of personal listening devices did not change. | • Weak study design as there was no comparison or control group. |
| Keppler et al. (2015) [ | This education program was presented one-on-one between the audiologist and the subject using a structured slide show. It contained information about functioning of the normal auditory system, the effects of noise exposure on the auditory system, and the preventative measures including information regarding HPDs. Five questions were asked to the participants to evaluate the level of understanding. Audiometric evaluation was also performed on the subjects. | Educational intervention improved the hearing protection attitude, belief and frequency of HPD use. There was a significant decrease in recreational noise exposure between pre and post training sessions. | • Study was conducted with a very small sample size (i.e. pilot study). |
| Khan et al. (2018) [ | 1) Classroom training on noise exposure and HPD use, 2) classroom training on noise exposure and HPD use coupled with smartphone app training to measure noise levels during noisy farm tasks and 3) computer training on on noise exposure and HPD use. | All three formats of educational interventions improved hearing conservation and protection knowledge, attitude & HPD use within each group. When the groups were compared the changes of knowledge, attitude & HPD use between groups were non-significant. | • Study was conducted with a very small sample size (i.e. pilot study). |
NIHL Noise-induced hearing loss, HPD Hearing protection device
*Berg et al. (2009) [33]