Affiliation:
1. Department of Communication Sciences & Disorders, Syracuse University, New York
Abstract
Purpose
The purpose of this study was to determine if re-instructing a hearing aid (HA) user on the specific skill(s) they could not successfully perform on the Practical Hearing Aid Skills Test–Revised (PHAST-R) resulted in better HA use and care skills than a traditional fitting method. This is referred to as “targeted re-instruction.” Also, factors that might affect HA use and care skills, including memory function, hearing handicap, and hearing aid–related attitudes, were assessed.
Method
This study was a randomized control trial. Twenty-six new HA users (13 experimental; 13 control) were fit with HAs and provided a standard HA orientation. HA use and care skills were measured immediately following the HA fitting and then again at 4 weeks post-HA fitting. The experimental group was administered the PHAST-R twice during the trial period to identify the HA use and care skills that participants needed re-instruction on.
Results
Participants in the experimental group maintained their HA use and care skills over the 4-week HA trial period, whereas participants in the control group showed a significant decline. Working memory, hearing handicap, and HA-related attitudes were not found to be correlated with HA use and care skills.
Conclusions
Participants who did not receive targeted re-instruction showed a decline in their HA use and care skills after only 4 weeks of HA use, whereas targeted re-instruction prevented a decline in HA use and care skills. It took an average of less than 10 min to administer the PHAST-R and provide targeted re-instruction, indicating that it would be appropriate to use in a clinical setting.
Publisher
American Speech Language Hearing Association
Reference42 articles.
1. Motivation to Address Self-Reported Hearing Problems in Adults With Normal Hearing Thresholds
2. American Academy of Audiology. (2015). Adult patients with severe-to-profound unilateral sensorineural hearing loss (pp. 1–49).
3. American National Standards Institute. (2010). American national specification for audiometers (Vol. ANSI S3.6–2010)
.
4. American Speech-Language-Hearing Association. (n.d.). Hearing aids for adults (Practice Portal)
. Retrieved from http://www.asha.org/Practice-Portal/Professional-Issues/Hearing-Aids-For-Adults/
5. Investigating the Knowledge, Skills, and Tasks Required for Hearing Aid Management: Perspectives of Clinicians and Hearing Aid Owners