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Service Provision for Children Who Are Hard of Hearing at Preschool and Elementary School Ages
Journal article   Open access   Peer reviewed

Service Provision for Children Who Are Hard of Hearing at Preschool and Elementary School Ages

Thomas A Page, Melody Harrison, Mary Pat Moeller, Jacob Oleson, Richard M Arenas and Meredith Spratford
Language, speech & hearing services in schools, Vol.49(4), pp.965-981
10/24/2018
DOI: 10.1044/2018_LSHSS-17-0145
PMCID: PMC6430501
PMID: 30286245
url
https://doi.org/10.1044/2018_LSHSS-17-0145View
Published (Version of record) Open Access

Abstract

To characterize preschool and school services for children who are hard of hearing (CHH), we described service setting, amount, and configuration and analyzed the relationship between service receipt and student hearing levels and language scores. Characteristics of professionals providing services were described and then used to predict level of comfort with skills supporting listening and spoken language. The amount of provider communication with children's audiologists was also investigated. Participants included parents of CHH (preschool n = 174; school n = 155) and professionals (preschool n = 133; school n = 104) who completed interviews and questionnaires as part of a longitudinal study. Children's hearing, speech, and language data were collected from annual testing and analyzed in relation to service data. A majority (81%) of preschool-age CHH received services. Children were more likely to be in a preschool for children who are deaf or hard of hearing (CDHH) or exceptional children than a general education preschool. By elementary school, 70% received services, nearly all in general education settings. Sessions averaged twice a week for a total of approximately 90 min. Children who no longer received services performed significantly better on speech/language measures than those who received services, regardless of service setting. Professionals were primarily speech-language pathologists (SLPs) and teachers of CDHH. SLPs reported significantly less comfort with skills involving auditory development and hearing technologies and less frequent communication with the child's audiologists than teachers of CDHH. Overall communication with audiologists was more frequent in the preschool years. As preschool-age CHH transition into school, the majority continue to qualify for services. Congruent with national trends, school-age CHH in the Outcomes of Children with Hearing Loss study were most often in general education settings. Without specialized preprofessional or postgraduate training, SLPs and teachers of CDHH did not report comfort with all the skills critical to developing listening and spoken language. This finding supports the need for increased implementation of interprofessional practice among SLPs and teachers of CDHH, as well as audiologists, to best meet the needs unique to this population.
United States Humans Child, Preschool Interprofessional Relations Male School Health Services - statistics & numerical data Correction of Hearing Impairment - statistics & numerical data Hearing Loss - rehabilitation Female Surveys and Questionnaires Facilities and Services Utilization - statistics & numerical data Language Therapy - statistics & numerical data Child Longitudinal Studies

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