2011
DOI: 10.1007/s00405-011-1672-1
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Universal newborn hearing screening, a revolutionary diagnosis of deafness: real benefits and limitations

Abstract: The finding that early detection of permanent congenital childhood hearing loss produces worthwhile benefit in terms of improved speech and language provides the rationale for the universal screening of newborns. The aim of the present study is to collect the current evidence with regard to the efficacy, the results and outcomes of universal hearing screening programs. An extensive search of the literature was performed in Medline and other available database sources. Study selection was based on the evaluatio… Show more

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Cited by 82 publications
(35 citation statements)
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“…Our rate of screening before 1 month of age was below 95%. The high rates of newborns lost to follow-up may be associated with the introduction of more measures in the screening program to reduce referral rates [2] . Other reasons for the high number of newborns lost to follow-up in our study may be the absence of a secretariat system to follow-up every failed newborn and remind parents regarding their future appointments, low degree of awareness regarding hearing loss in families and healthcare providers, and presentation of failed newborns' anxious parents to the tertiary hospitals because of the absence of psychological support after screening.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
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“…Our rate of screening before 1 month of age was below 95%. The high rates of newborns lost to follow-up may be associated with the introduction of more measures in the screening program to reduce referral rates [2] . Other reasons for the high number of newborns lost to follow-up in our study may be the absence of a secretariat system to follow-up every failed newborn and remind parents regarding their future appointments, low degree of awareness regarding hearing loss in families and healthcare providers, and presentation of failed newborns' anxious parents to the tertiary hospitals because of the absence of psychological support after screening.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Some risk factors that were associated with hearing impairment, such as head trauma, and chemotherapy were excluded and consanguineous marriage was added as a risk factor [23] . Different newborn hearing screening programs have been used in different countries, but the most acceptable methods for UNHS include both the TEOAE and automated ABR tests [2,24] . Therefore, we used the TEOAE and automated ABR tests in our UNHS program.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
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“…hearing impairment may go undetected because of, for example, screening device failures or they may pass the test as false positives [9,10]. Moreover, mild or unilateral hearing impairments may fail to be detected, and some hearing impairments that develop during the first months of life may be difficult to uncover [11].…”
mentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Both AABR and AOAE are non-invasive, rapid screening tests. OAE measures sounds that are produced by the cochlea to response to acoustic stimulation, and AABR measures electroencephalographic waveforms in response to clicks (12)(13)(14)(15).…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%