Litcius/Paper detail

Factors influencing hearing aid use, benefit and satisfaction in adults: a systematic review of the past decade

Bopane Mothemela, Vinaya Manchaiah, Faheema Mahomed‐Asmail, Megan Knoetze, De Wet Swanepoel

2023International Journal of Audiology19 citationsDOI

Abstract

OBJECTIVE: This systematic review examined the audiological and non-audiological factors that influence hearing aid use, benefit and satisfaction in adults based on studies published during the last decade (2010 and 2023). DESIGN: Studies were identified by using PRISMA guidelines for systematic searches on five platforms (Web of Science, Scopus, PubMed, EBSCOhost including CINAHL and Academic Search Complete). The National Institute of Health Quality assessment tool and the Oxford Centre for Evidence Based Medicine tool were used for quality assessment and grading of level of evidence. RESULTS: = 37) were identified. Clear determinants of hearing aid use, benefit and satisfaction included hearing sensitivity, self-reported hearing difficulty, speech perception, attitude and beliefs. 34 cross-sectional studies in this review were graded level 4, 9 cohort studies rated level 3, and 3 randomised control trials rated level 2. CONCLUSION: Factors associated with hearing aid outcomes identified in the past decade support previous evidence. New factors like social networks and service-delivery models, have also been identified. These factors require further investigations through high quality studies to further strengthen existing evidence.

Topics & Concepts

CINAHLHearing aidMedicineGrading (engineering)MEDLINESystematic reviewHearing lossPsycINFOPatient satisfactionScopusAudiologyPsychologyPsychological interventionNursingCivil engineeringEngineeringPolitical scienceLawHearing Loss and RehabilitationHearing Impairment and CommunicationHearing, Cochlea, Tinnitus, Genetics