A Forum on Pediatric Hearing Health Care Disparities
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A Forum on Pediatric Hearing Health Care Disparities
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This SIG 9 activity includes three articles from the forum on pediatric hearing health care
disparities.
Warner-Czyz and colleagues present a research article on barriers to follow-up in
Early Hearing Detection and Intervention (EHDI) programs. They report research on
examining barriers to the EHDI process by comparing census-based variables at the
state and region level for national and Texas EHDI outcomes. Their results show that
nationally, higher labor force participation, lower unemployment rates, and presence of
health insurance significantly correlated with higher rates of completing EHDI
benchmarks. Conclusions indicate that both state and nationwide data have a strong link
between socioeconomic factors and EHDI follow-through. There is a high need to
increase attention to families of children with hearing loss who are underserved, live far
from resources, and have economic challenges.
Richlin et al. share a clinical focus article that includes a systematic evaluation of
family barriers and an interview with an expert in hearing health care disparities, Dr.
Matthew Bush. The authors compile data from available literature and the interview
including demographics, themes, and available interventions. They identify entry barriers
in the categories of steps, proximity, health care literacy, and systemic inequalities. They
conclude that only through evolution of existing systemic bias and harmful structures can
we make meaningful change.
The viewpoint article by Sprouse focuses on trauma-informed care, examining
the impact of trauma, investigating the principles of trauma-informed care, and
identifying ways to implement it in pediatric hearing health care. As providers, working
with children and families who experienced or are experiencing trauma need training to
give a trauma-informed approach. Children with hearing loss who have experienced
trauma and adverse experiences need consideration with trauma-informed techniques
incorporated into their hearing health care treatment plan.
Learning
Outcomes
You will be able to:
- connect two barriers to early hearing detection and intervention follow-up with
two potential solutions to reducing loss to follow-up
- categorize disparities in hearing health care
- discuss the signs and symptoms of secondary traumatic stress experienced
by providers
Assessment
Type
Self-assessment—Think
about what you learned and report on the Completion Form how you will use your
new knowledge.
Articles
in This Course
- Barriers to Follow-Up in Early Hearing Detection and Intervention Programs by
Andrea D. Warner-Czyz, Sarah Crow, Andrea Gohmert, Stephanie Williams, and
Michael Romero,
published in SIG 9, published online January 30, 2024
- Living in the Void Between Hearing Health Care Encounters: Evaluation of the Barriers
Families Face by Blair C. Richlin, Kristina M. Blaiser, and Matthew Bush,
published in SIG 9, published online September 25, 2023
- Advancing Clinical Decision Making Through Trauma-Informed Care in Pediatric Hearing
Health Care by Brittney J. Sprouse,
published in SIG 9, published online January 30, 2024
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