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Heather M Fortnum a MRC Institute of Hearing
Research, University Park, Nottingham NG7 2RD, b Human Communication and Deafness Group, University of
Manchester, Manchester M13 9PL
Correspondence to: Dr Fortnum hf{at}ihr.mrc.ac.uk
Objective:
To estimate the prevalence of confirmed
permanent childhood hearing impairment and its profile across age and
degree of impairment in the United Kingdom.
What is already known on this topic
What this study adds
Design:
Retrospective total ascertainment through sources in the health and education sectors by postal questionnaire.
Setting:
Hospital based otology and audiology
departments, community health clinics, education services for hearing
impaired children.
Participants:
Children born from 1980 to 1995, resident in United Kingdom in 1998, with severe permanent childhood
hearing impairment (hearing level in the better ear >40 dB averaged
over 0.5, 1, 2, and 4 kHz).
Main outcome measures:
Numbers of cases with date of
birth and severity of impairment converted to prevalences for each
annual birth cohort (cases/1000 live births) and adjusted for underascertainment.
Results:
26 000 notifications ascertained 17 160
individual children. Prevalence rose from 0.91 (95% confidence
interval 0.85 to 0.98) for 3 year olds to 1.65 (1.62 to 1.68) for
children aged 9-16 years. Adjustment for underascertainment increased
estimates to 1.07 (1.03 to 1.12) and 2.05 (2.02 to 2.08). Comparison
with previous studies showed that prevalence increases with age, rather than declining with year of birth.
Conclusions:
Prevalence of confirmed permanent
childhood hearing impairment increases until the age of 9 years to a
level higher than previously estimated. Relative to current yields of universal neonatal hearing screening in the United Kingdom, which are
close to 1/1000 live births, 50-90% more children are diagnosed with
permanent childhood hearing impairment by the age of 9 years. Paediatric audiology services must have the capacity to achieve early
identification and confirmation of these additional cases.
The prevalence of confirmed permanent childhood hearing impairment
(>40 dB HL) in the United Kingdom has been estimated to rise with age
to 1.33/1000 live births among children aged 5 years and
older
The prevalence of confirmed permanent childhood hearing impairment
(>40 dB HL) in the United Kingdom has risen with age to at least
1.65/1000 live births (and may be as high as 2.05/1000 live births)
among children 9 years of age and older
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