Professor
Tobias Neher
Dept. of Clinical Research, SDU
Projekt styring | ||
Projekt status | Open | |
Data indsamlingsdatoer | ||
Start | 01.08.2023 | |
Slut | 31.07.2026 | |
Hearing aids are typically fitted based on a patient's audiogram, even though the audiogram cannot capture individual hearing difficulties and needs fully. Thus, suboptimal hearing aid outcome is common. Previous research has identified self-reported hearing handicap as a promising predictor of hearing aid uptake, use and satisfaction. However, hearing handicap is not systematically assessed in clinical practice, and so the value of doing so for hearing aid fitting is currently unclear.
The aims of this project are (1) to evaluate a Danish translation of a well-established self-report measure of hearing handicap in terms of its psychometric properties, (2) to compare the predictive power of this measure in relation to hearing aid benefit to that of established audiological tests, and (3) to investigate its usefulness for tailoring advanced hearing aid functions to individual users.
Older adults with a broad range of hearing abilities from Odense municipality and nearby.
Demographic data, standard hearing tests, speech perception data, questionnaire data
Dept. of Speech, Language & Hearing Sciences, Indiana University, USA