Winn Stephen
Centre for Applied Language, Linguistics and Communication Studies, Griffith University, Queensland, Australia.
Am Ann Deaf. 2006 Fall;151(4):434-40. doi: 10.1353/aad.2006.0048.
This paper examines hearing aid use by 60 congenitally deaf individuals who attended special education units in South Australia. The study indicates that only one-third to half of deaf adults wore their hearing aids in social situations for speech detection. Just over one-third (n = 22) of the deaf adults involved in this study wore their hearing aids at work and less than half (n = 27) wore their hearing aids at home. Younger deaf adults were more likely to wear their hearing aids in the home than older deaf adults. Younger deaf adults tended to wear their hearing aids more frequently when they were at school if they had perceived their teachers had a positive attitude to deafness. This study found that there was no statistically significant relationship between wearing hearing aids and employment status. There was also no statistically significant difference in hearing aid use between men and women. The low use of hearing aids could be attributed at least in part to the current Australian policy regarding supply and servicing of hearing aids to congenitally deaf individuals which ceases to be free after the individual reaches 21 years of age.
本文研究了南澳大利亚州60名先天性失聪者使用助听器的情况,这些失聪者就读于特殊教育机构。研究表明,只有三分之一到一半的成年失聪者在社交场合佩戴助听器以进行言语识别。参与本研究的成年失聪者中,略多于三分之一(n = 22)的人在工作时佩戴助听器,不到一半(n = 27)的人在家中佩戴助听器。较年轻的成年失聪者比年长的成年失聪者更有可能在家中佩戴助听器。如果较年轻的成年失聪者觉得老师对失聪持积极态度,那么他们在学校时往往更频繁地佩戴助听器。本研究发现,佩戴助听器与就业状况之间没有统计学上的显著关系。男性和女性在助听器使用方面也没有统计学上的显著差异。助听器使用率低至少部分可归因于澳大利亚目前关于向先天性失聪者供应和维修助听器的政策,该政策在个人年满21岁后不再免费。