AI Article Synopsis

  • The AChild study investigates children under 6 years old with hearing loss in Austria, focusing on their varied characteristics and outcomes.
  • Despite advances in the field, developmental outcomes for these children remain below average and studies often exclude those with additional disabilities or non-majority languages.
  • AChild aims to identify early predictors of development and family outcomes through a participatory approach that incorporates parent involvement and adheres to established measurement standards for international comparison.

Article Abstract

Children with hearing loss and their families represent a large variety with regard to their auditory, medical, psychological, and family resource characteristics. Despite recent advances, developmental outcomes are still below average, with a significant proportion of variety remaining unexplained. Furthermore, there is a lack of studies including the whole diversity of children with hearing loss. The AChild study (Austrian Children with Hearing Impairment-Longitudinal Databank) uses an epidemiological longitudinal design including all children living in Upper and Lower Austria with a permanent uni- or bilateral hearing loss below the age of 6 years, irrespective of additional disabilities, family language, and family resources. The demographic characteristics of the first 126 children enrolled in the study showed that about half of the children are either children with additional disabilities (31%) and/or children not growing up with the majority language (31.7%) that are usually excluded from comprehensive longitudinal studies. AChild aims for a characterization of the total population of young children with hearing loss including developmental outcomes. Another goal is the identification of early predictors of developmental trajectories and family outcomes. In addition to child-related predictors the examination of family-child transactions malleable by family-centred early intervention is of particular interest. The study is designed as participatory including parent representation atall stages. Measures have been chosen, following other large population-based studies in order to gain comparability and to ensure international data pooling.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC8955731PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/jcm11061508DOI Listing

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