School of Speech, Language, and Hearing Sciences, San Diego State University, San Diego, California, USA.
USC Caruso Department of Otolaryngology - Head and Neck Surgery, Keck School of Medicine of the University of Southern California, Los Angeles, California, USA.
Ear Hear. 2021 Sep/Oct;42(5):1238-1252. doi: 10.1097/AUD.0000000000001012.
This study examined the psychosocial, adaptive behavior, and language outcomes of young children who are hard of hearing (HH) without additional disabilities or neurocognitive impairments. Relations between early developmental outcomes and child and parent demographic variables, and parenting stress and self-efficacy were also explored.
Participants were 39 children with early identified, permanent mild to severe hearing loss, between the ages of 2 and 3 years, and a comparison group of 47 children with normal hearing (NH). Developmental outcomes were measured using clinician-administered standardized tests and parent-completed behavior rating instruments specific to language, psychosocial functioning, and adaptive behavior. Mothers completed self-report measures that assess parenting stress and maternal self-efficacy.
The children who are HH were similar to the children with NH in terms of their psychosocial functioning and adaptive behavior, with the exception of their socialization skills. As a group, the children who are HH performed significantly worse than their peers with NH on all measures of language ability. Among the children who are HH, maternal self-efficacy showed a strong positive correlation with adaptive behavior outcomes; however, it failed to contribute unique variance above that explained by language ability and gender. Maternal self-efficacy was also significantly correlated with better psychosocial outcomes, but only parenting stress proved to be a significant predictor of child behavioral problems once other variables considered were in the model.
Early-identified young children who are HH can demonstrate age-appropriate development in multiple domains, including language, psychosocial, and adaptive behavior. However, mild to severe hearing loss places young children with no additional disabilities or neurocognitive impairments at risk for language delays. Although the children who are HH demonstrated no more emotional or behavioral problems than their same-age peers with NH, results suggest that language delays increase their vulnerability for delays in various aspects of social competence.
本研究考察了无其他残疾或神经认知障碍的轻度至重度听力损失儿童的心理社会、适应行为和语言发展结果。还探讨了早期发展结果与儿童和家长人口统计学变量之间的关系,以及育儿压力和自我效能感之间的关系。
参与者为 39 名年龄在 2 至 3 岁之间的早期确诊、永久性轻度至重度听力损失儿童和 47 名听力正常(NH)儿童的对照组。使用临床医生管理的标准化测试和特定于语言、心理社会功能和适应行为的家长完成的行为评定量表来衡量发展结果。母亲完成了评估育儿压力和母亲自我效能感的自我报告量表。
在心理社会功能和适应行为方面,听力损失儿童与听力正常儿童相似,除了他们的社交技能。作为一个群体,听力损失儿童在所有语言能力测量上的表现明显逊于听力正常儿童。在听力损失儿童中,母亲自我效能感与适应行为结果呈强正相关;然而,它未能在语言能力和性别解释的基础上提供独特的差异。母亲自我效能感也与更好的心理社会结果显著相关,但只有育儿压力在模型中考虑了其他变量后,才被证明是儿童行为问题的一个显著预测因素。
早期确诊的轻度至重度听力损失儿童在多个领域,包括语言、心理社会和适应行为方面,都能表现出与年龄相符的发展。然而,轻度至重度听力损失使无其他残疾或神经认知障碍的幼儿面临语言延迟的风险。尽管听力损失儿童的情绪或行为问题并不比他们同龄的 NH 儿童多,但结果表明,语言延迟增加了他们在社交能力各个方面延迟的脆弱性。