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Sustained Benefits of Hearing Aids
189
Citations
19
References
1992
Year
Family MedicineGeriatric PsychiatrySustained BenefitsMental HealthGeriatric MedicineDenver ScaleHealth SciencesAural RehabilitationPsychiatryGeriatricsAural AugmentationAudiologyHearing DisordersRehabilitationHuman HearingHearing LossHearing Handicap InventoryCochlear ImplantGeriatric AssessmentSpeech PerceptionMedicine
This study was designed to evaluate long-term benefits of hearing aids in elderly individuals with hearing loss. A primary care cohort of 192 elderly, hearing-impaired veterans (mean age 72 +/- 6, 97% White, 94% retired) were assessed at baseline and at 4, 8, and 12 months after hearing aid fitting. Drop-out rates at 4, 8, and 12 months were 5%, 13%, and 16%, respectively. Outcome assessments included several quality-of-life scales: Hearing Handicap Inventory in the Elderly (HHIE), Quantified Denver Scale of Communication Function (QDS), Geriatric Depression Scale (GDS), and the Short Portable Mental Status Questionnaire (SPMSQ). All quality-of-life areas improved significantly from baseline to 4-month post-hearing aid fittings (p < 0.05). Social and emotional (HHIE), communication (QDS), and depression (GDS) benefits were sustained at 8 and 12 months, whereas cognitive changes (SPMSQ) reverted to baseline at 12 months. We conclude that hearing aids provide sustained benefits for at least a year in these elderly individuals with hearing impairment.
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