Publication | Closed Access
Newborn Hearing Screening: Effectiveness, Importance of High-Risk Factors, and Characteristics of Infants in the Neonatal Intensive Care Unit and Well-Baby Nursery
90
Citations
19
References
2005
Year
The present study found 575 neonates failing hearing screening of 25,288 tested newborns (2.3%). The fact that 78% of newborns who failed hearing screening were in the well-baby nurseries further supports the necessity of universal hearing screening instead of selective screening in neonatal intensive care units, even with the obvious impact on cost-effectiveness. Even if limited funding lead to selective screening in neonatal intensive care units, this should not be applied to high-risk newborns but to all neonatal intensive care unit neonates. Continuous assessment of risk factors and the related possibility of failing hearing screening are of paramount importance in designing hearing screening programs and refining the respective criteria.
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