Trial of Affordable Bone Conduction Headphones to Support a Deaf Child's Education in Malawi

Author:

Bene Modesta1,Phiri Mwanaisha1,Fitzgerald Oconnor Isobel23,de Cates Catherine23,Hampton Thomas4,Holland Brown Tamsin35ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Audiology Department, Queen Elizabeth Central Hospital, Blantyre, Malawi

2. ENT Department, Cambridge University Hospitals, Cambridge, UK

3. Cambridge Global Health Partnership, Cambridge, UK

4. Malawi Liverpool Wellcome Trust, Cambridge, UK

5. Paediatrics, Cambridgeshire Community Services NHS Trust, Cambridge, UK

Abstract

A 13-year-old child with hearing loss secondary to chronic serous otitis media and bilateral tympanic perforations had been unable to hear the teacher at school and unable to pass end-of-year exams. In 2020, she trialed a bone conduction headset paired by Bluetooth to a remote microphone and used this to support her hearing at school, socializing with friends and in the family home. Due to the COVID (COronaVIrus Disease) pandemic and a cholera epidemic, she was followed up 3 years later. The child (now 16 years old) reported using the headset every day for 3 years. Able to hear the teacher, she reported having passed school exams every year since using the device, and now had ambitions to study medicine.

Funder

Addenbrooke's Charitable Trust, Cambridge University Hospitals

Publisher

SAGE Publications

Subject

Health Policy,Health (social science),Leadership and Management

Reference8 articles.

1. World Health Organization & United Nations Children's Fund (UNICEF). Global report on assistive technology. World Health Organization. License: CC BY-NC-SA 3.0 IGO. https://apps.who.int/iris/handle/10665/354357 accessed 2022

2. Prevalence of paediatric chronic suppurative otitis media and hearing impairment in rural Malawi: A cross-sectional survey

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