Olusanya Bolajoko O, Swanepoel De Wet, Chapchap Mônica J, Castillo Salvador, Habib Hamed, Mukari Siti Z, Martinez Norberto V, Lin Hung-Ching, McPherson Bradley
Institute of Child Health and Primary Care, College of Medicine, University of Lagos, Lagos, Nigeria.
BMC Health Serv Res. 2007 Jan 31;7:14. doi: 10.1186/1472-6963-7-14.
Early detection of infants with permanent hearing loss through infant hearing screening is recognised and routinely offered as a vital component of early childhood care in developed countries. This article investigates the initiatives and progress towards early detection of infants with hearing loss in developing countries against the backdrop of the dearth of epidemiological data from this region.
A cross-sectional, descriptive study based on responses to a structured questionnaire eliciting information on the nature and scope of early hearing detection services; strategies for financing services; parental and professional attitudes towards screening; and the performance of screening programmes. Responses were complemented with relevant data from the internet and PubMed/Medline.
Pilot projects using objective screening tests are on-going in a growing number of countries. Screening services are provided at public/private hospitals and/or community health centres and at no charge only in a few countries. Attitudes amongst parents and health care workers are typically positive towards such programmes. Screening efficiency, as measured by referral rate at discharge, was generally found to be lower than desired but several programmes achieved other international benchmarks. Coverage is generally above 90% but poor follow-up rates remain a challenge in some countries. The mean age of diagnosis is usually less than six months, even for community-based programmes.
Lack of adequate resources by many governments may limit rapid nationwide introduction of services for early hearing detection and intervention, but may not deter such services altogether. Parents may be required to pay for services in some settings in line with the existing practice where healthcare services are predominantly financed by out-of-pocket spending rather than public funding. However, governments and their international development partners need to complement current voluntary initiatives through systematic scaling-up of public awareness and requisite manpower development towards sustainable service capacities at all levels of healthcare delivery.
通过婴儿听力筛查早期发现永久性听力损失婴儿,在发达国家被视为并常规作为幼儿护理的重要组成部分。本文在该地区缺乏流行病学数据的背景下,调查发展中国家在早期发现听力损失婴儿方面的举措和进展。
一项横断面描述性研究,基于对一份结构化问卷的回复,该问卷收集有关早期听力检测服务的性质和范围、服务融资策略、家长和专业人员对筛查的态度以及筛查项目表现的信息。回复辅以来自互联网和PubMed/Medline的相关数据。
越来越多的国家正在开展使用客观筛查测试的试点项目。在公立/私立医院和/或社区卫生中心提供筛查服务,只有少数国家免费提供。家长和医护人员对这类项目的态度通常是积极的。以出院时转诊率衡量的筛查效率普遍低于预期,但一些项目达到了其他国际标准。覆盖率一般高于90%但在一些国家随访率低仍是一项挑战。即使是基于社区的项目,诊断的平均年龄通常也不到6个月。
许多政府缺乏足够资源可能会限制在全国迅速引入早期听力检测和干预服务,但不一定会完全阻碍这类服务。在某些情况下,可能需要家长根据现有做法为服务付费,即医疗服务主要由自费支出而非公共资金提供。然而,政府及其国际发展伙伴需要通过系统提高公众意识和必要的人力开发,以实现各级医疗服务的可持续服务能力,来补充当前的自愿举措。