Factors associated with delayed referral and hearing rehabilitation for congenital sensorineural hearing loss. Int J Pediatr Otorhinolaryngol 2023 Dec;175:111770
Date
10/28/2023Pubmed ID
37890209DOI
10.1016/j.ijporl.2023.111770Scopus ID
2-s2.0-85174694338 (requires institutional sign-in at Scopus site) 1 CitationAbstract
OBJECTIVES: To identify the impact of social determinants of health and clinical status on referral and intervention for congenital sensorineural hearing loss.
STUDY DESIGN: Retrospective chart review of children with confirmed sensorineural or mixed hearing loss between 2013 and 2021 at a single academic medical institution.
METHODS: Referral rates and timing for hearing rehabilitation, rates and timing of completed evaluation, and rate and timing of amplification were recorded. Patient demographics included gestational age, race, ethnicity, sex, hearing loss severity, and CMV status.
RESULTS: There were 216 children with confirmed sensorineural or mixed hearing loss, of which 77 had a unilateral hearing loss and 89 a severe or profound hearing loss. Delayed referral for hearing aid evaluation was noted in premature patients (median 375 days premature, median 147 term; p < 0.01) and publicly insured patients (median 215 days, median 123 private; p = 0.04). Delayed time to hearing aid fitting was noted for non-white patients (median 325 days, median 203 white patients; p < 0.01), publicly insured patients (median 309 days, median 212 private insurance; p < 0.02), and premature patients (median 462 days, median 224 term; p = 0.03). White patients were more likely to be referred for cochlear implant (p = 0.03).Privately insured patients and patients with a positive CMV test were more likely to be referred for cochlear implant evaluation, be seen in the cochlear implant clinic, and undergo implantation (p < 0.05). Non-white patients had a delay in cochlear implantation referral (median 928 days, median 398 days white patients; p = 0.05). Prolonged interval between evaluation in cochlear implant clinic to implantation was noted for privately insured patients (median 125 days; median 78 days publicly insured; p = 0.05).
CONCLUSIONS: Sociodemographic factors were significantly associated with hearing amplification referral rates and time until amplification for children with identified congenital sensorineural hearing loss. For cochlear implantation, insurance type, CMV status were significantly associated with rate and timing of cochlear implant pathway.
Author List
Drake M, Friedland DR, Hamad B, Marfowaa G, Adams JA, Luo J, Flanary VAuthors
David R. Friedland MD Associate Director, Director, Chief, Professor in the Otolaryngology department at Medical College of WisconsinJake Luo Ph.D. Associate Professor; Director, Center for Biomedical Data and Language Processing (BioDLP) in the Health Informatics & Administration department at University of Wisconsin - Milwaukee
MESH terms used to index this publication - Major topics in bold
ChildCochlear Implantation
Cochlear Implants
Hearing
Hearing Loss, Mixed Conductive-Sensorineural
Hearing Loss, Sensorineural
Humans
Retrospective Studies