| Literature DB >> 31856690 |
Michael A Akeroyd1, George G Browning2, Adrian C Davis3,4, Mark P Haggard5.
Abstract
The 1011-page book, Hearing in Adults, published in 1995, contains the fullest report of the United Kingdom’s Medical Research Council National Study of Hearing. It was designed to determine the prevalence and distribution in Great Britain of audiometrically measured hearing loss as a function of age, gender, occupation, and noise exposure. The study’s size, quality, and breadth made it unique when it was done in the 1980s. These qualities remain, and its data are still the primary U.K. source for the prevalence of auditory problems. However, only 550 copies were printed, and the book is essentially unobtainable today. We describe here a fully searchable, open-access, digital (PDF) “reprinting” of Hearing in Adults, summarizing the study’s design and the book’s contents, together with a brief commentary in the light of subsequent developments.Entities:
Keywords: audiology; prevalence, hearing loss
Mesh:
Year: 2019 PMID: 31856690 PMCID: PMC7000909 DOI: 10.1177/2331216519887614
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Trends Hear ISSN: 2331-2165 Impact factor: 3.293