학술논문

Testing the Informativeness of Diverse Measures of Auditory Processing for Clinical Audiological Practice in Middle-Aged Adults in Mexico.
Document Type
Article
Source
American Journal of Audiology; Mar2024, Vol. 33 Issue 1, p55-65, 11p
Subject
American Speech-Language-Hearing Association
Auditory perception testing
Self-evaluation
Research methodology evaluation
Auditory perception
Research methodology
Cognition
Comparative studies
Audiometry
Data analysis
Hearing disorder diagnosis
Statistics
Medical care costs
Medical protocols
T-test (Statistics)
Spanish language
Research funding
Descriptive statistics
Mexico
Language
ISSN
10590889
Abstract
Purpose: Standard clinical audiologic assessment is limited in its ability to capture variance in self-reported hearing difficulty. Additionally, the costs associated with clinical testing in audiology create financial barriers for hearing health care in developing countries like Mexico. This study used an open-source Spanish-language tool called PART (Portable Automated Rapid Testing) to test the hypothesis that a battery of assessments of auditory processing can complement standard clinical audiological assessment to better capture the variance of self-reported hearing difficulty. Method: Forty-three adults between 40 and 69 years of age were tested in Mexico City using a traditional clinical pure-tone audiogram, cognitive screening, and a battery of PART-based auditory processing assessments including a speechon- speech competition spatial release from masking task. Results were compared to self-reported hearing difficulty, assessed with a Spanish-language adaptation of the Hearing Handicap Inventory for the Elderly--Screening Version (HHIE-S). Results: Several measures from the PART battery exhibited stronger correlations with self-reported hearing difficulties than the pure-tone audiogram. The spatial release from masking task best captured variance in HHIE-S scores and remained significant after controlling for the effects of age, audibility, and cognitive score. Conclusions: The spatial release from masking task can complement traditional clinical measures to better account for patient's self-reported hearing difficulty. Open-source access to this test in PART supports its implementation for Spanish speakers in clinical settings around the world at low cost. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]