Concepedia

Publication | Open Access

Adoption, use and non-use of hearing aids: a robust estimate based on Welsh national survey statistics

65

Citations

29

References

2020

Year

Abstract

<b>Objective:</b> To report a robust measure of the proportion of adults who do not use their hearing aids.<b>Design:</b> Data on hearing aid use was extracted from national household survey data, from 2004 to 2018 in Wales, UK.<b>Study sample:</b> A representative sample of 10,000 to 16,000 adults per year.<b>Results:</b> Self-reported hearing difficulty increased smoothly from 14 to 16% during the 12 years when survey administration remained unchanged. The proportion reporting that they had tried a hearing aid increased from 5 to 7% and stabilised at this level since 2011. The proportion who reported using their hearing aid most of the time increased from 47 to 52% during the 15-year period. The proportion who did not use their hearing aids at all decreased from 21 to 18% over the same period.<b>Conclusions:</b> In this extensively-surveyed population, approximately 20% of adults currently do not use their hearing aids at all, 30% use them some of the time and the remaining 50% most of the time. Hearing aids are valued by many, as judged by use, but there is substantial room for improvement. Inclusion of questions on use within a large-scale, regular national survey enables the collection of demonstrably reliable data.

References

YearCitations

Page 1