AR Flashcards

1
Q

What is AR?

A

A multi-faced approach to reducing or eliminating the effects of hearing loss

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2
Q

What is the goal of AR?

A

Mediate the detrimental effects of hearing loss on an individual’s participation, activity, and quality of life

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3
Q

What are the components of AR?

A
  • Sensory management with HAs, CIs, and/or other devices
  • Orientation to respective devices
  • Perceptual training to enhance speech perception and overall communication
  • Counseling that incorporates the patient, family members, caregivers, and/or friends (Boothroyd, 2007)
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4
Q

What results in improvement of QOL?

A

Hearing aids used in conjunction with AR

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5
Q

What is QOL?

A

A broad concept that refers to how an individual perceives their life in terms of their own cultural and value systems

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6
Q

What affects QOL?

A

QOL is affected by an individual’s health, psychological state, level of independence, relationships, and personal beliefs (WHO, 1997)

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7
Q

What are the 3 types of AR available?

A
  • Individualized therapy
  • Group AR
  • Computer-based AT
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8
Q

What is individualized therapy?

A

A form of AR that historically focused on enhancing speech and lipreading abilities (Hawkins, 2005)

  • Each session is tailored for the individual patient and the patient sets their own pace
  • Can last months to a year since the pace is set by the patient
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9
Q

Is there evidence to support individualized AR?

A
  • No recent studies have evaluated individualized AR

- Systematic review by Sweetow and Palmer (2004) demonstrated little effectiveness of individualized AR

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10
Q

What is the most common form of group AR?

A

Clinician based counseling approach

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11
Q

What are the three advantages of group AR?

A

Hawkins (2005)

  • Individuals with HL are given an opportunity to discuss feelings, problems, and solutions related to communication difficulties
  • AR model is time and cost-effective for patients/clinicians
  • Clinician is able to administer the same service to multiple patients at one time
  • Some studies have demonstrated reduced HA return following group AR services
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12
Q

What evidence supports group AR?

A

Abrams, Chisholm, & McCardle (2002)

  • Conducted cost-benefit analysis between 2 different treatment groups: HAs alone and HAs used with short-term AR
  • Short-term group AR was administered over a 4-week period
  • Outcomes were assessed with the SF-36V questionnaire which contains a mental component summary (MCS) scale and a physical component summary (PCS) scale
  • The MCS scale asks questions about emotions, anxiety, nervousness, cheerfulness, etc.
  • The SF-36V was administered at both pre- and post-treatment
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13
Q

What did the Abrams, Chisholm, & McCardle (2002) study find?

A
  • Significant improvements in the mean MCS scores in both treatment groups
  • Treating HL can directly improve an individual’s mental health, as well as quality of life
  • However, no statistically significant differences were observed between the two treatment groups
  • HAs alone were sufficent in improving QOL and that short-term group AR did not have an effect
  • However, this study only evaluated the short-term benefits, rather than the long-term benefits
  • Lastly, the cost-benefit analysis revealed that hearing aids used in conjunction with group AR were more cost-effective in terms of long-term benefit than with hearing aid use alone
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14
Q

What were the limitations of the Abrams, Chisholm, & McCardle (2002) study?

A
  • Participants were all veterans and findings were generalized to the non-verteran population
  • HAs included in this study are available to veterans at a lower cost than in the non-military sector
  • Authors compared the costs between the two treatment groups, rather than analyzed individual costs
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15
Q

Why does research not support group AR?

A
  • Only short-term benefits have been studied (Hawkins, 2005)
  • Lack of information regarding long-term benefits make it challenging to determine if any improvements in QOL are obtained with group AR
  • There are few well-controlled studies with an inadequate number of participants
  • Due to the heterogeneity of these studies, as well as the lack of well-designed methodology, it is difficult to make conclusions about the efficacy of group AR as an intervention option
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16
Q

What is the goal of AT?

A

Provide instruction in auditory and/or visual-auditory perceptual skills that are involved in language perception

17
Q

What is the LACE program?

A

Listening and Communication Enhancement (LACE) (Sweetow & Sabes, 2006)

  • Individuals are trained in 5 tasks that are completed for 30 minutes a day for 20 days over a 4-week period
  • The 5 tasks focus on listening in degraded speech, improving auditory memory, and improving the use of linguistic and contextual cues required for speech recognition
18
Q

What do studies evaluating AT not support the efficacy of group AR?

A
  • They are heterogenous in their test paradigms, feedback provided, and outcome measures used
  • A study directly evaluating the LACE program found that outcomes with HA use alone were superior to outcomes with the AT program (Sweetow & Sabes, 2006)