Walker Elizabeth A, Spratford Meredith, Foody Meaghan, McCreery Ryan
Department of Communication Sciences and Disorders, The University of Iowa, Iowa City.
Audibility, Perception, and Cognition Laboratory, Boys Town National Research Hospital, Omaha, NE.
Lang Speech Hear Serv Sch. 2025 Jul 16;56(3):522-541. doi: 10.1044/2025_LSHSS-24-00096. Epub 2025 May 19.
Children who use hearing aids show large individual differences in the amount of time they wear their devices, but the vast majority of research studies have focused on infants and preschoolers who are deaf and hard of hearing (D/HH). There is limited empirical evidence regarding hearing aid use in adolescents or published data on adolescents' attitudes toward hearing aids. The overarching aim of the current study was to characterize hearing aid use in adolescents who are D/HH.
One hundred twenty-nine adolescents who are D/HH (12-19 years old) and their parents completed questionnaires about hearing aid use and attitudes toward amplification. Examiners collected data logging at research visits. Adolescents and parents estimated the average amount of time hearing aids were worn during the week and weekend. We conducted a linear regression analysis to investigate the relationships among the independent predictor variables (chronological age, age at hearing aid fitting, maternal education level, proximity of hearing aid fitting to prescriptive targets, and better ear pure-tone average) and the dependent variable (adolescent self-report of average daily hearing aid use).
Severity of hearing loss and maternal education level accounted for variation in hearing aid use among adolescents who are D/HH, whereas chronological age, age at hearing aid fitting, and proximity of fitting to prescriptive targets did not. Parent report, adolescent self-report, and data logging were in high agreement, although both parents and teenagers tended to overestimate the amount of daily hearing aid use by around 30 min.
In general, the results of the current study are inconsistent with the notion that adolescents decrease hearing aid use when they reach adolescence. Furthermore, many of the adolescents who participated in this study expressed positive attitudes about amplification, demonstrating emerging self-advocacy.
使用助听器的儿童在佩戴时长上存在很大的个体差异,但绝大多数研究都集中在失聪和听力障碍(D/HH)的婴幼儿及学龄前儿童身上。关于青少年使用助听器的实证证据有限,也缺乏关于青少年对助听器态度的公开数据。本研究的总体目标是描述D/HH青少年的助听器使用情况。
129名D/HH青少年(12 - 19岁)及其父母完成了关于助听器使用和对放大设备态度的问卷调查。检查人员在研究访问时收集数据记录。青少年和父母估计了一周内及周末佩戴助听器的平均时长。我们进行了线性回归分析,以研究独立预测变量(实足年龄、首次佩戴助听器的年龄、母亲教育水平、助听器佩戴与规定目标的接近程度以及较好耳的纯音平均听阈)与因变量(青少年对每日平均使用助听器的自我报告)之间的关系。
听力损失的严重程度和母亲教育水平可解释D/HH青少年在助听器使用上的差异,而实足年龄、首次佩戴助听器的年龄以及佩戴与规定目标的接近程度则不能。父母报告、青少年自我报告和数据记录高度一致,不过父母和青少年都倾向于将每日使用助听器的时长高估约30分钟。
总体而言,本研究结果与青少年进入青春期后会减少助听器使用这一观点不一致。此外,参与本研究的许多青少年对放大设备表达了积极态度,展现出新兴的自我维权意识。