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Perceived disability in children and adults with single sided deafness at two tertiary institutions

Background: Single-sided deafness is defined as a severe-to-profound hearing loss in one ear and normal or near-normal hearing in the other ear. The handicap experienced by patients with bilateral sensorineural hearing loss is well known, but the consequences of single-sided deafness are often under...

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Main Author: Elfallah, Balgeis
Other Authors: Harris, Tashneem
Format: Thesis
Language:English
Published: Division of Otorhinolaryngology 2022
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access_status_str Open Access
author Elfallah, Balgeis
author2 Harris, Tashneem
author_browse Elfallah, Balgeis
Harris, Tashneem
author_facet Harris, Tashneem
Elfallah, Balgeis
author_sort Elfallah, Balgeis
collection Thesis
description Background: Single-sided deafness is defined as a severe-to-profound hearing loss in one ear and normal or near-normal hearing in the other ear. The handicap experienced by patients with bilateral sensorineural hearing loss is well known, but the consequences of single-sided deafness are often underestimated based on the assumption that a person with normal hearing in the contralateral ear is not likely to face a major handicap. Objectives: To determine the handicap level in patients with single-sided deafness, and compare the handicap between employed and unemployed patients. Also, to investigate the relationship between perceived disability and noise in the workplace. The effect of age and duration of hearing loss on the perceived disability of single-sided deafness was also examined. Methods: Two validated questionnaires (1) Speech, Spatial and Qualities of Hearing Scale (SSQ12); and (2) Hearing Handicap Inventory for adults (HHIA) were handed to participants with SSD. This research was conducted in two tertiary hospitals in Cape Town, namely, Groote Schuur Hospital and Red Cross War Memorial Children's Hospital, over the period from November 2018 to August 2020. Results: Fifty-four participants were included in the study, 44 adults and 10 children. Employing the HHIA questionnaire, the results show that 39% of adult participants have a significant handicap compared to 32% who have a moderate handicap and 30% who have no handicap. Also, there was no significant difference in the total handicap scores between the employed and unemployed groups, and the presence of noise in the workplace did not influence the total handicap score in the employed group. There was no influence on age or duration of hearing loss on the total handicap score. The mean of the responses in the SSQ12 questionnaire was between 3.42 and 7; thus, some participants experience major hearing difficulties, while others have minor difficulties. Most of the participants are struggling to follow a conversation with background noise and have difficulty localizing sounds. They also struggle to identify the sound distance. They report increased effort when listening to someone or something. Conclusions: A majority of the patients with single-sided deafness in our population either have a severe or a mild-moderate handicap. A good assessment of the individual's degree of handicap is required to adequately counsel the patient and assist in the decision regarding treatment options.
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provenance_str_mv Harvested via OAI-PMH from UCTD — University of Cape Town Open Access Repository
publishDate 2022
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spelling oai:open.uct.ac.za:11427/35721 Perceived disability in children and adults with single sided deafness at two tertiary institutions Elfallah, Balgeis Harris, Tashneem Otorhinolaryngology Background: Single-sided deafness is defined as a severe-to-profound hearing loss in one ear and normal or near-normal hearing in the other ear. The handicap experienced by patients with bilateral sensorineural hearing loss is well known, but the consequences of single-sided deafness are often underestimated based on the assumption that a person with normal hearing in the contralateral ear is not likely to face a major handicap. Objectives: To determine the handicap level in patients with single-sided deafness, and compare the handicap between employed and unemployed patients. Also, to investigate the relationship between perceived disability and noise in the workplace. The effect of age and duration of hearing loss on the perceived disability of single-sided deafness was also examined. Methods: Two validated questionnaires (1) Speech, Spatial and Qualities of Hearing Scale (SSQ12); and (2) Hearing Handicap Inventory for adults (HHIA) were handed to participants with SSD. This research was conducted in two tertiary hospitals in Cape Town, namely, Groote Schuur Hospital and Red Cross War Memorial Children's Hospital, over the period from November 2018 to August 2020. Results: Fifty-four participants were included in the study, 44 adults and 10 children. Employing the HHIA questionnaire, the results show that 39% of adult participants have a significant handicap compared to 32% who have a moderate handicap and 30% who have no handicap. Also, there was no significant difference in the total handicap scores between the employed and unemployed groups, and the presence of noise in the workplace did not influence the total handicap score in the employed group. There was no influence on age or duration of hearing loss on the total handicap score. The mean of the responses in the SSQ12 questionnaire was between 3.42 and 7; thus, some participants experience major hearing difficulties, while others have minor difficulties. Most of the participants are struggling to follow a conversation with background noise and have difficulty localizing sounds. They also struggle to identify the sound distance. They report increased effort when listening to someone or something. Conclusions: A majority of the patients with single-sided deafness in our population either have a severe or a mild-moderate handicap. A good assessment of the individual's degree of handicap is required to adequately counsel the patient and assist in the decision regarding treatment options. 2022-02-18T06:37:01Z 2022-02-18T06:37:01Z 2021 2022-02-10T14:26:37Z Master Thesis Masters MMed http://hdl.handle.net/11427/35721 eng application/pdf Division of Otorhinolaryngology Faculty of Health Sciences
spellingShingle Otorhinolaryngology
Elfallah, Balgeis
Perceived disability in children and adults with single sided deafness at two tertiary institutions
thesis_degree_str Master's
title Perceived disability in children and adults with single sided deafness at two tertiary institutions
title_full Perceived disability in children and adults with single sided deafness at two tertiary institutions
title_fullStr Perceived disability in children and adults with single sided deafness at two tertiary institutions
title_full_unstemmed Perceived disability in children and adults with single sided deafness at two tertiary institutions
title_short Perceived disability in children and adults with single sided deafness at two tertiary institutions
title_sort perceived disability in children and adults with single sided deafness at two tertiary institutions
topic Otorhinolaryngology
url http://hdl.handle.net/11427/35721
work_keys_str_mv AT elfallahbalgeis perceiveddisabilityinchildrenandadultswithsinglesideddeafnessattwotertiaryinstitutions