Authors
Piers Dawes, Karen J Cruickshanks, Mary E Fischer, Barbara EK Klein, Ronald Klein, David M Nondahl
Publication date
2015/11/2
Journal
International journal of audiology
Volume
54
Issue
11
Pages
838-844
Publisher
Taylor & Francis
Description
Objective
To clarify the impact of hearing aids on mental health, social engagement, cognitive function, and physical health outcomes in older adults with hearing impairment.
Design
We assessed hearing handicap (hearing handicap inventory for the elderly; HHIE-S), cognition (mini mental state exam, trail making, auditory verbal learning, digit-symbol substitution, verbal fluency, incidence of cognitive impairment), physical health (SF-12 physical component, basic and instrumental activities of daily living, mortality), social engagement (hours per week spent in solitary activities), and mental health (SF-12 mental component) at baseline, five years prior to baseline, and five and 11 years after baseline.
Study sample
Community-dwelling older adults with hearing impairment (N = 666) from the epidemiology of hearing loss study cohort.
Results
There were no significant differences between hearing-aid users and non …
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