Neonatal Hearing Rescreening in a Second-Level Hospital: Problems and Solutions

Author:

Gómez-Delgado Marta1,Sequi-Sabater Jose Miguel2,Marco-Sabater Ana1,Lora-Martin Alberto13,Aparisi-Climent Victor13ORCID,Sequi-Canet Jose Miguel1ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Pediatric Department, Francesc de Borja University Hospital, 46702 Gandia, Spain

2. Rheumatology Department, La Ribera University Hospital, 46600 Alzira, Spain

3. Foundation for the Promotion of Health and Biomedical Research of the Valencian Community (FISABIO), 46020 Valencia, Spain

Abstract

Second-level hospitals face peculiarities that make it difficult to implement hearing rescreening protocols, which is also common in other settings. This study analyzes the hearing rescreening process in these kinds of hospitals. A total of 1130 individuals were included; in this cohort, 61.07% were hospital newborns who failed their first otoacoustic emission test after birth (n = 679) or were unable to perform the test (n = 11), and who were then referred to an outpatient clinic. The remaining 38.93% were individuals born in another hospital with their first test conducted in the outpatient clinic (n = 440). A high number of rescreenings were made outside of the recommended time frame, mainly in children referred from another hospital. There was a high lost-to-follow-up rate, especially regarding otolaryngologist referrals. Neonatal hearing screening at second-level hospitals is difficult because of staffing and time constraints. This results in turnaround times that are longer than recommended, interfering with the timely detection of hearing loss. This is particularly serious in outpatient children with impaired screening. Referral to out-of-town centers leads to unacceptable follow-up loss. Legislative support for all these rescreening issues is necessary. In this article, these findings are discussed and some solutions are proposed.

Publisher

MDPI AG

Subject

Podiatry,Otorhinolaryngology

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