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新冠疫情期间植入人工耳蜗儿童的口语交流暴露情况。

Exposure to Spoken Communication During the COVID-19 Pandemic Among Children With Cochlear Implants.

机构信息

Archie's Cochlear Implant Laboratory, The Hospital for Sick Children, Toronto, Ontario, Canada.

Department of Otolaryngology-Head & Neck Surgery, University of Toronto, Toronto, Ontario, Canada.

出版信息

JAMA Netw Open. 2023 Oct 2;6(10):e2339042. doi: 10.1001/jamanetworkopen.2023.39042.

Abstract

IMPORTANCE

School closures and other COVID-19-related restrictions could decrease children's exposure to speech during important stages of development.

OBJECTIVE

To assess whether significant decreases in exposure to spoken communication found during the initial phase of the COVID-19 pandemic among children using cochlear implants are confirmed for a larger cohort of children and were sustained over the first years of the COVID-19 pandemic.

DESIGN, SETTING, AND PARTICIPANTS: This cohort study used datalogs collected from children with cochlear implants during clinical visits to a tertiary pediatric hospital in Toronto, Ontario, Canada, from January 1, 2018, to November 11, 2021. Children with severe to profound hearing loss using cochlear implants were studied because their devices monitored and cataloged levels and types of sounds during hourly use per day (datalogs) and because their hearing and spoken language development was particularly vulnerable to reduced sound exposure. Statistical analyses were conducted between January 2022 and August 2023.

MAIN OUTCOMES AND MEASURES

Daily hours of sound were captured by the cochlear implant datalogging system and categorized into 6 auditory scene categories, including speech and speech-in-noise. Time exposed to speech was calculated as the sum of daily hours in speech and daily hours in speech-in-noise. Residual hearing in the ear without an implant of children with unilateral cochlear implants was measured by pure tone audiometry. Mixed-model regression analyses revealed main effects with post hoc adjustment of 95% CIs using the Satterthwaite method.

RESULTS

Datalogs (n = 2746) from 262 children (137 with simultaneous bilateral cochlear implants [74 boys (54.0%); mean (SD) age, 5.8 (3.5 years)], 38 with sequential bilateral cochlear implants [24 boys (63.2%); mean (SD) age, 9.1 (4.2) years], and 87 with unilateral cochlear implants [40 boys (46.0%); mean (SD) age, 7.9 (4.6) years]) who were preschool aged (n = 103) and school aged (n = 159) before the COVID-19 pandemic were included in analyses. There was a slight increase in use among preschool-aged bilateral cochlear implant users through the pandemic (early pandemic, 1.4 h/d [95% CI, 0.3-2.5 h/d]; late pandemic, 2.3 h/d [95% CI, 0.6-4.0 h/d]) and little change in use among school-aged bilateral cochlear implant users (early pandemic, -0.6 h/d [95% CI, -1.1 to -0.05 h/d]; late pandemic, -0.3 h/d [95% CI, -0.9 to 0.4 h/d]). However, use decreased during the late pandemic period among school-aged children with unilateral cochlear implants (-1.8 h/d [95% CI,-3.0 to -0.6 h/d]), particularly among children with good residual hearing in the ear without an implant. Prior to the pandemic, children were exposed to speech for approximately 50% of the time they used their cochlear implants (preschool-aged children: bilateral cochlear implants, 46.6% [95% CI, 46.5%-47.2%] and unilateral cochlear implants, 52.1% [95% CI, 50.7%-53.5%]; school-aged children: bilateral cochlear implants, 47.6% [95% CI, 46.8%-48.4%] and unilateral cochlear implants, 51.0% [95% CI, 49.4%-52.6%]). School-aged children in both groups experienced significantly decreased speech exposure in the early pandemic period (bilateral cochlear implants, -12.1% [-14.6% to -9.4%]; unilateral cochlear implants, -15.5% [-20.4% to -10.7%]) and late pandemic periods (bilateral cochlear implants, -5.3% [-8.0% to -2.6%]; unilateral cochlear implants, -11.2% [-15.3% to -7.1%]) compared with the prepandemic baseline.

CONCLUSIONS AND RELEVANCE

This cohort study using datalogs from children using cochlear implants suggests that a sustained reduction in children's access to spoken communication was found during more than 2 years of COVID-19 pandemic-related lockdowns and school closures.

摘要

重要性

学校关闭和其他与 COVID-19 相关的限制可能会减少儿童在发育重要阶段接触言语的机会。

目的

评估在 COVID-19 大流行初期使用 Cochlear 植入物的儿童中发现的与口语相关的接触量显著减少是否在更大的儿童队列中得到证实,以及这种减少是否在 COVID-19 大流行的前几年持续存在。

设计、地点和参与者:这项队列研究使用了从加拿大安大略省多伦多市一家儿科三级医院的 Cochlear 植入儿童临床就诊期间收集的数据日志,时间范围为 2018 年 1 月 1 日至 2021 年 11 月 11 日。研究对象为患有重度至极重度听力损失的儿童,因为他们的设备每天每小时监测和记录声音的水平和类型(数据日志),并且他们的听力和口语语言发展特别容易受到声音暴露减少的影响。统计分析于 2022 年 1 月至 2023 年 8 月进行。

主要结果和措施

Cochlear 植入物数据日志系统捕获每日的声音小时数,并分为 6 个听觉场景类别,包括言语和言语噪声。计算暴露于言语的时间为每日言语时间和每日言语噪声时间的总和。单侧 Cochlear 植入儿童的未植入耳残余听力通过纯音听力测试进行测量。使用 Satterthwaite 方法的事后调整 95%置信区间(CI)的混合模型回归分析揭示了主要影响。

结果

分析包括 262 名儿童的数据日志(n=2746),这些儿童分为三组:103 名学龄前儿童(同时双侧 Cochlear 植入者 74 名[54.0%;平均(SD)年龄 5.8(3.5 岁],38 名序贯双侧 Cochlear 植入者[63.2%;平均(SD)年龄 9.1(4.2 岁])和 87 名单侧 Cochlear 植入者[46.0%;平均(SD)年龄 7.9(4.6 岁]),这些儿童在 COVID-19 大流行前处于学前年龄(n=103)和学龄(n=159)。在大流行期间,学龄前双侧 Cochlear 植入使用者的使用略有增加(早期大流行,每天 1.4 小时[95%CI,0.3-2.5 小时];晚期大流行,每天 2.3 小时[95%CI,0.6-4.0 小时]),而学龄双侧 Cochlear 植入使用者的使用变化不大(早期大流行,每天减少 0.6 小时[95%CI,-1.1 至-0.05 小时];晚期大流行,每天减少 0.3 小时[95%CI,-0.9 至 0.4 小时])。然而,在大流行后期,单侧 Cochlear 植入的学龄儿童的使用时间减少了 1.8 小时/天[95%CI,-3.0 至-0.6 小时/天],特别是在未植入耳有良好残余听力的儿童中。在大流行之前,儿童在使用 Cochlear 植入物的时间中大约有 50%的时间暴露于言语(学龄前儿童:双侧 Cochlear 植入者,46.6%[95%CI,46.5%-47.2%]和单侧 Cochlear 植入者,52.1%[95%CI,50.7%-53.5%];学龄儿童:双侧 Cochlear 植入者,47.6%[95%CI,46.8%-48.4%]和单侧 Cochlear 植入者,51.0%[95%CI,49.4%-52.6%])。两组学龄儿童在早期大流行期间(双侧 Cochlear 植入者,-12.1%[-14.6%至-9.4%];单侧 Cochlear 植入者,-15.5%[-20.4%至-10.7%])和晚期大流行期间(双侧 Cochlear 植入者,-5.3%[-8.0%至-2.6%];单侧 Cochlear 植入者,-11.2%[-15.3%至-7.1%])的言语暴露量显著低于大流行前的基线。

结论和相关性

这项使用 Cochlear 植入儿童数据日志的队列研究表明,在 COVID-19 大流行相关封锁和学校关闭的两年多时间里,儿童接触口语的机会持续减少。

https://cdn.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/blobs/ad20/10611997/f1259d7358df/jamanetwopen-e2339042-g001.jpg

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