Publication | Open Access
Global and regional hearing impairment prevalence: an analysis of 42 studies in 29 countries
749
Citations
10
References
2011
Year
Hearing impairment is a leading cause of disease burden, yet population‑based studies that measure it are rare. The study aims to estimate regional and global hearing impairment prevalence from sparse data and to calculate corresponding uncertainty intervals. The authors used a Bayesian hierarchical model, built from literature review data and additional investigator tabulations, to estimate prevalence by region, sex, age, and hearing level, and evaluated the model with cross‑validation. Using 42 studies from 29 countries, the model estimated that in 2008 global prevalence of hearing impairment was 1.4 % in children 5–14, 9.8 % in females >15, and 12.2 % in males >15, with prevalence increasing with age, male sex, and lower income, and 87 % of survey estimates fell within the model’s 95 % uncertainty intervals, underscoring a higher burden in middle‑ and low‑income countries.
Background: Hearing impairment is a leading cause of disease burden, yet population-based studies that measure hearing impairment are rare. We estimate regional and global hearing impairment prevalence from sparse data and calculate corresponding uncertainty intervals. Methods: We accessed papers from a published literature review and obtained additional detailed data tabulations from investigators. We estimated the prevalence of hearing impairment by region, sex, age and hearing level using a Bayesian hierarchical model, a method that is effective for sparse data. As the primary objective of modelling was to produce regional and global prevalence estimates, including for those regions with scarce to no data, models were evaluated using cross-validation. Results: We used data from 42 studies, carried out between 1973 and 2010 in 29 countries. Hearing impairment was positively related to age, male sex and middle- and low-income regions. We estimated that the global prevalence of hearing impairment (defined as an average hearing level of 35 decibels or more in the better ear) in 2008 was 1.4% (95% uncertainty interval 1.0–2.2%) for children aged 5–14 years, 9.8% (7.7–13.2%) for females >15 years of age and 12.2% (9.7–16.2%) for males >15 years of age. The model exhibited good external validity in the cross-validation analysis, with 87% of survey estimates falling within our final model's 95% uncertainty intervals. Conclusion: Our results suggest that the prevalence of child and adult hearing impairment is substantially higher in middle- and low-income countries than in high-income countries, demonstrating the global need for attention to hearing impairment.
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