Ak. Karlsson et U. Rosenhall, AURAL REHABILITATION IN THE ELDERLY - SUPPLY OF HEARING-AIDS RELATED TO MEASURED NEED AND SELF-ASSESSED HEARING PROBLEMS, Scandinavian audiology, 27(3), 1998, pp. 153-160
Three age cohorts of elderly persons in Goteborg (70, 75 and 88 years
of age) were studied regarding hearing aid (HA) rehabilitation, on the
one hand, and measured and self-assessed hearing, on the other. The p
articipants, 615 in number, were representative of their ages and were
selected from a geriatric population study. At age 70, 12% of the par
ticipants had been equipped with HAs. At age 75, the corresponding fig
ure was 14% and at age 88, 32%. The correlations between self-assessed
and audiometrically measured hearing were reasonably high (r = 0.5-0.
7). According to the result for the self-assessed measure, we estimate
that elderly persons with pure-tone averages (PTAs) at 30 dB HL (0.5-
4 kHz, better ear) are in need of aural rehabilitation. Nevertheless,
few subjects with PTAs between 30 and 49 dB HL have been equipped with
HAs. At age 88, almost 20% of those with pronounced problems had no H
A. Veri few participants with no documented hearing problems for aural
rehabilitation had been equipped with HAs.