Assessment of hearing screening programmes across 47 countries or regions III: provision of childhood hearing screening after the newborn period

INTERNATIONAL JOURNAL OF AUDIOLOGY(2021)

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Abstract
Objective To inventory provision and features of childhood hearing screening after the newborn period (CHS), primarily in Europe. Design From each participating country or region, experts provided information through an extensive questionnaire: implementation year, age at screening, test method, pass criteria, screening location, screener profession, and quality indicators: coverage, referral, follow-up and detection rates, supplemented by literature sources. Study sample Forty-two European countries or regions, plus Russia, Malawi, Rwanda, India, and China. Results CHS was performed universally with pure-tone audiometry screening (PTS) in 17 countries or regions, whereas non-universal CHS was performed in eight with PTS or whisper tests. All participating countries with universal PTS had newborn hearing screening. Coverage rate was provided from three countries, detection rate from one, and referral and follow-up rate from two. In four countries, universal PTS was performed at two ages. Earliest universal PTS was performed in a (pre)school setting by nurses (n = 9, median age: 5 years, range: 3-7), in a healthcare setting by doctors and nurses (n = 7, median age: 4.5 years, range: 4-7), or in both (n = 1). Conclusions Within universal CHS, PTS was mostly performed at 4-6 years by nurses. Insufficient collection of data and monitoring with quality indicators impedes evaluation of screening.
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Key words
Pre-school-age hearing screening, childhood hearing impairment, early detection, screening protocol, screening outcome
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