Pre-School Hearing Screening in a Selected School in Korle Bu, Ghana
Loading...
Date
Authors
Journal Title
Journal ISSN
Volume Title
Publisher
University of Ghana
Abstract
Background: Hearing impairment has detrimental effects on the linguistic and educational
development of children. In developing countries routine screening programmes for hearing
impairment is minimal.
Aim: The aim of the study was to screen pre-school pupils for hearing loss and related ear
pathologies and determine the prevalence of hearing loss at test frequencies for purposes of early
management and intervention.
Methods: Across sectional study design was adopted to purposively sample and screen 150 preschool
pupils aged 3 – 5 years of a nursery school via otoscopic examinations and pure tone
screening audiometry. The audiological screening was conducted in a quiet environment with a
30dBHL and 25dBHL pass/refer criteria at 500 Hz and 1 kHz to 6 kHz respectively.
Results: The highest prevalence of hearing loss were registered at 500 Hz (14%) and 6000 Hz
(9%), while a prevalence of 6% -7% was recorded for test frequencies of 1000 Hz – 4000 Hz.
Statistical analysis via chi-square tests established no significant association between pure tone
hearing screening and age and gender of the pre-school children for both ears at different test
frequencies (500 Hz – 6000 Hz).
Conclusions: The results from the study affirmed that hearing screening was very necessary at
the pre-school level and provides a baseline for building a more comprehensive pre-school
hearing screening protocol for early identification and detection of hearing loss
Keywords: Pre-school pupils, pure tone audiometry, otoscopic examination, hearing loss,
prevalence.
Description
Thesis (MSc) - University of Ghana, 2013