Semin Hear 2009; 30(2): 080-093
DOI: 10.1055/s-0029-1215437
© Thieme Medical Publishers

Minimal Hearing Loss in Children: Minimal But Not Inconsequential

Anne Marie Tharpe1 , Douglas P. Sladen2 , Jeanne Dodd-Murphy3 , Stephen J. Boney4
  • 1Department of Hearing and Speech Sciences, Vanderbilt University School of Medicine, Nashville, Tennessee
  • 2Department of Communication Sciences and Disorders, The University of Texas at Austin, Texas
  • 3Department of Communication Sciences and Disorders, Baylor University, Waco, Texas
  • 4Education and Communication Disorders, University of Nebraska, Lincoln, Nebraska
Further Information

Publication History

Publication Date:
30 April 2009 (online)

ABSTRACT

It has been ~25 years since Bess published his first work on unilateral hearing loss in children. Those early articles triggered considerable interest in the audiology and medical communities and represented an expansion of our focus at that time on children with severe to profound degrees of hearing loss to include those with lesser degrees of hearing loss. Before Bess' work, professionals were of the opinion that minimal degrees of hearing loss were of little consequence to a child's development. However, these early studies demonstrated that children with minimal degrees of permanent hearing loss were, in fact, at considerable risk for academic and behavioral problems. Today those problems persist, and we are still wrestling with which children with minimal degrees of hearing loss require intervention, what type(s) of intervention is most effective, and whether preventive measures exist to avoid the commonly reported problems known to plague some of these children. This article reviews the early studies conducted by Bess and his colleagues documenting the psychoeducational, audiological, and behavioral difficulties experienced by children with permanent unilateral and minimal bilateral hearing loss. In addition, contemporary studies are reported along with a summary of current thinking on the appropriate management of these populations.

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Anne Marie TharpePh.D. 

Professor, Department of Hearing and Speech Sciences, Vanderbilt University School of Medicine, 1215 21st Ave. South, Medical Center East

S. Tower, #8310, Nashville, TN 37232

Email: anne.m.tharpe@vanderbilt.edu

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