Consensus on hearing aid candidature and fitting for mild hearing loss, with and without tinnitus: Delphi review

Objectives: In many countries including the United Kingdom, hearing aids are a first line of audiologic intervention for many people with tinnitus and aidable hearing loss. Nevertheless, there is a lack of high quality evidence to support that they are of benefit for tinnitus, and wide variabilit...

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Main Authors: Sereda, Magdalena, Hoare, Derek J., Nicholson, Richard, Smith, Sandra, Hall, Deborah A.
Format: Article
Published: Lippincott, Williams & Wilkins 2015
Subjects:
Online Access:https://eprints.nottingham.ac.uk/33224/
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author Sereda, Magdalena
Hoare, Derek J.
Nicholson, Richard
Smith, Sandra
Hall, Deborah A.
author_facet Sereda, Magdalena
Hoare, Derek J.
Nicholson, Richard
Smith, Sandra
Hall, Deborah A.
author_sort Sereda, Magdalena
building Nottingham Research Data Repository
collection Online Access
description Objectives: In many countries including the United Kingdom, hearing aids are a first line of audiologic intervention for many people with tinnitus and aidable hearing loss. Nevertheless, there is a lack of high quality evidence to support that they are of benefit for tinnitus, and wide variability in their use in clinical practice especially for people with mild hearing loss. The aim of this study was to identify a consensus among a sample of UK clinicians on the criteria for hearing aid candidature and clinical practice in fitting hearing aids specifically for mild hearing loss with and without tinnitus. This will allow professionals to establish clinical benchmarks and to gauge their practice with that used elsewhere. Design: The Delphi technique, a systematic methodology that seeks consensus amongst experts through consultation using a series of iterative questionnaires, was used. A three-round Delphi survey explored clinical consensus among a panel of 29 UK hearing professionals. The authors measured panel agreement on 115 statements covering: (i) general factors affecting the decision to fit hearing aids, (ii) protocol-driven factors affecting the decision to fit hearing aids, (iii) general practice, and (iv) clinical observations. Consensus was defined as a priori ≥70% agreement across the panel. Results: Consensus was reached for 58 of the 115 statements. The broad areas of consensus were around factors important to consider when fitting hearing aids; hearing aid technology/features offered; and important clinical assessment to verify hearing aid fit (agreement of 70% or more). For patients with mild hearing loss, the greatest priority was given by clinicians to patient-centered criteria for fitting hearing aids: hearing difficulties, motivation to wear hearing aids, and impact of hearing loss on quality of life (chosen as top five by at least 64% of panelists). Objective measures were given a lower priority: degree of hearing loss and shape of the audiogram (chosen as top five by less than half of panelists). Areas where consensus was not reached were related to the use of questionnaires to predict and verify hearing aid benefit for both hearing and tinnitus; audiometric criteria for fitting hearing aids; and safety of using loud sounds when verifying hearing aid fitting when the patient has tinnitus (agreement of <70%). Conclusions: The authors identified practices that are considered important when recommending or fitting hearing aid for a patient with tinnitus. More importantly perhaps, they identified practical issues where there are divided opinions. Their findings inform the design of clinical trials and open up debate on the potential impact of practice differences on patient outcomes.
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spelling nottingham-332242024-08-15T15:32:36Z https://eprints.nottingham.ac.uk/33224/ Consensus on hearing aid candidature and fitting for mild hearing loss, with and without tinnitus: Delphi review Sereda, Magdalena Hoare, Derek J. Nicholson, Richard Smith, Sandra Hall, Deborah A. Objectives: In many countries including the United Kingdom, hearing aids are a first line of audiologic intervention for many people with tinnitus and aidable hearing loss. Nevertheless, there is a lack of high quality evidence to support that they are of benefit for tinnitus, and wide variability in their use in clinical practice especially for people with mild hearing loss. The aim of this study was to identify a consensus among a sample of UK clinicians on the criteria for hearing aid candidature and clinical practice in fitting hearing aids specifically for mild hearing loss with and without tinnitus. This will allow professionals to establish clinical benchmarks and to gauge their practice with that used elsewhere. Design: The Delphi technique, a systematic methodology that seeks consensus amongst experts through consultation using a series of iterative questionnaires, was used. A three-round Delphi survey explored clinical consensus among a panel of 29 UK hearing professionals. The authors measured panel agreement on 115 statements covering: (i) general factors affecting the decision to fit hearing aids, (ii) protocol-driven factors affecting the decision to fit hearing aids, (iii) general practice, and (iv) clinical observations. Consensus was defined as a priori ≥70% agreement across the panel. Results: Consensus was reached for 58 of the 115 statements. The broad areas of consensus were around factors important to consider when fitting hearing aids; hearing aid technology/features offered; and important clinical assessment to verify hearing aid fit (agreement of 70% or more). For patients with mild hearing loss, the greatest priority was given by clinicians to patient-centered criteria for fitting hearing aids: hearing difficulties, motivation to wear hearing aids, and impact of hearing loss on quality of life (chosen as top five by at least 64% of panelists). Objective measures were given a lower priority: degree of hearing loss and shape of the audiogram (chosen as top five by less than half of panelists). Areas where consensus was not reached were related to the use of questionnaires to predict and verify hearing aid benefit for both hearing and tinnitus; audiometric criteria for fitting hearing aids; and safety of using loud sounds when verifying hearing aid fitting when the patient has tinnitus (agreement of <70%). Conclusions: The authors identified practices that are considered important when recommending or fitting hearing aid for a patient with tinnitus. More importantly perhaps, they identified practical issues where there are divided opinions. Their findings inform the design of clinical trials and open up debate on the potential impact of practice differences on patient outcomes. Lippincott, Williams & Wilkins 2015-07 Article PeerReviewed Sereda, Magdalena, Hoare, Derek J., Nicholson, Richard, Smith, Sandra and Hall, Deborah A. (2015) Consensus on hearing aid candidature and fitting for mild hearing loss, with and without tinnitus: Delphi review. Ear and Hearing, 36 (4). pp. 417-429. ISSN 0196-0202 Delphi review; hearing aids; mild hearing loss; tinnitus http://dx.doi.org/10.1097/AUD.0000000000000140 doi:10.1097/AUD.0000000000000140 doi:10.1097/AUD.0000000000000140
spellingShingle Delphi review; hearing aids; mild hearing loss; tinnitus
Sereda, Magdalena
Hoare, Derek J.
Nicholson, Richard
Smith, Sandra
Hall, Deborah A.
Consensus on hearing aid candidature and fitting for mild hearing loss, with and without tinnitus: Delphi review
title Consensus on hearing aid candidature and fitting for mild hearing loss, with and without tinnitus: Delphi review
title_full Consensus on hearing aid candidature and fitting for mild hearing loss, with and without tinnitus: Delphi review
title_fullStr Consensus on hearing aid candidature and fitting for mild hearing loss, with and without tinnitus: Delphi review
title_full_unstemmed Consensus on hearing aid candidature and fitting for mild hearing loss, with and without tinnitus: Delphi review
title_short Consensus on hearing aid candidature and fitting for mild hearing loss, with and without tinnitus: Delphi review
title_sort consensus on hearing aid candidature and fitting for mild hearing loss, with and without tinnitus: delphi review
topic Delphi review; hearing aids; mild hearing loss; tinnitus
url https://eprints.nottingham.ac.uk/33224/
https://eprints.nottingham.ac.uk/33224/
https://eprints.nottingham.ac.uk/33224/