It has been suggested that there is considerable unmet need in respect of h
earing loss amongst the elderly population, but no routine screening test i
s currently used in general practice to identify these patients. The aim of
this study was to determine whether routine questionnaire screening of the
over-65s is a feasible way to identify elderly patients with hearing loss
in primary care and whether patients so identified would benefit from heari
ng aid fitting. A cohort of patients consisting of a sample of 234 individu
als aged between 65 and 74, attending a doctor's surgery over a specified p
eriod, received a scored questionnaire to complete based on the Hearing Han
dicap Inventory for the Elderly Screening test. Hearing aid owners and thos
e with a hearing handicap were identified, and non-aid wearers with handica
p offered examination and referral. Those patients who were fitted with aid
s were assessed after six months for aid usage and persisting handicap. Twe
nty-five per cent of the patient sample reported a previously undiagnosed h
earing handicap. Six months after aid fitting, a reduction in hearing handi
cap was reported in 79 per cent of these cases and overall aid usage in the
population sample had increased from nine per cent to 20 per cent. Routine
questionnaire screening in general practice may be worthwhile since it is
easy to carry out and the resulting intervention significantly reduces repo
rted hearing handicap.