260 likes | 367 Views
The health and social outcomes of people with acquired hearing loss. Anthony Hogan National Centre for Epidemiology & Population Health. Overview. The social position of people with acquired hearing loss The health and social impacts of hearing loss Barriers to providing assistance
E N D
The health and social outcomes of people with acquired hearing loss Anthony Hogan National Centre for Epidemiology & Population Health
Overview • The social position of people with acquired hearing loss • The health and social impacts of hearing loss • Barriers to providing assistance • A comprehensive treatment model
People with hearing loss have endured stigmatisation • Deafness in ancient Greece • a curse • an absence of intelligence • an inability to reason • dull wittedness • excluded from participation in community life
People with hearing loss have endured stigmatisation • Deafness in Biblical times • Stubbornness of heart, the refusal to listen, co-operate and obey. • People with hearing loss and disabilities generally in biblical times, were poor outcasts, dependent on the charity of others for survival. • Deafness = dumb = stupid
People with hearing loss have endured stigmatisation • Deafness in medieval times • An absence of reason • People with disability seen as fools • A person unable to speak was not allowed to inherit the family fortune • Not allowed to receive the sacraments of the Church, which reflected one of the primary elements of full participation in community life • Speech associated with citizenship rights
People with hearing loss have endured stigmatisation • Deafness during the industrial revolution • Lost traditional work on the land • Unemployment soared as communication was central to work in cities • Social revolutions – ‘society’ feared for its safety • People with disability were institutionalised in large numbers – work houses • Bell and the remaking of deaf people as hearing people
Still stigmatistised today • Labels BHA members say people apply to them: • Deaf, heedless, snobbish, inattentive, stupid, idiot, not with it, dumb, ignorant, useless, retarded, boring, arrogant, stubborn, slow, vague and psycho
Still stigmatistised today • And labels some BHA members applied to themselves: • I’m a nuisance, I’m hard to include • I don’t matter, I don’t fit in • I feel depressed, isolated, I’m difficult • I feel less of a person, I am invisible • I feel left out.
Has society consistently considered having hearing problems as being an inherently bad thing!
How would you feel about going to a BBQ where you didn’t know many people?
The health and social impacts position of people with acquired hearing loss
Health impacts of hearing loss • elevated unadjusted male six year mortality rate among older males for those with uncorrected loss • male elevated risk rates for diabetes • high blood pressure • a higher incidence of stroke • increased rates of heart attack • higher use of prescribed medications.
Health impacts • Higher use of prescribed medications • Those with moderate to severe hearing loss are • three times more likely to see their doctor than members of the general population • up to seven times more likely to require assistance in the home • 15 times more likely to need assistance in activities of daily living.
Lots of HIPs present with reduced HRQoL Median .55
DISTRESS High Threshold Low The Relationship Between Stress and SWB • Dominant Source of SWB Control Homeostasis 75 SWB No stress High stress Stress Level of environmental challenge
Socio-economic impacts of hearing loss • Less likely to be in paid work by a minimum of at least two percentage points for adults of working age • With this rate potentially being much higher in harder economic times where people with disabilities are more vulnerable to the impacts of economic downturns • More likely to be on lower income than the population.
Social impacts of hearing loss • Increased effort and fatigue • Stress and anxiety • Difficulties in family relations • Social isolation • Negative self image
Workplace impacts for HIP people • Lost of confidence • Working twice as hard • Varied frustrations • Hanging on • Job hunting • Innovating • Skills development • Looking for accommodations
Sometimes aids and devices aren’t enough • We may need to change • But at the population level the evidence shows that technology alone is not enough • For individuals we need psycho-social rehabilitation • But society needs to change too
1 in 6 really? • We need change at a societal level • Accessible communication venues • Captions • Acceptance and support for new ways of talking with each other • Community education • It’s no longer just a man’s world • Nor is it just a hearing world either!
Psycho-social barriers to action • Mis-perceive affects of hearing loss • Reluctant to acknowledge hearing loss • Fear of being stigmatised (stupid or old) • Need for an engagement strategy
Rehabilitation Overview Engagement Audiology Patient Decision Making & Case Conference ENT Referrals Communication Strategies Therapies & Group Work Technology based Rehabilitation Closure