New Straits Times

1 IN 4 FACE HEARING PROBLEMS BY 2050

Extra investment in prevention and treatment crucially needed, says WHO

- GENEVA

ONE in four of the world’s population will suffer from hearing problems by 2050, the World Health Organisati­on warned yesterday, calling for extra investment in prevention and treatment.

The first-ever global report on hearing said that the causes of many of the problems — such as infections, diseases, birth defects, noise exposure and lifestyle choices — could be prevented. The report proposed a package of measures, which it calculated would cost US$1.33 per person per year.

Against that, it set the figure of nearly a trillion US dollars lost every year because the issue was not being properly addressed.

“Failure to act will be costly in terms of the health and wellbeing of those affected, and the financial losses arising from their exclusion from communicat­ion, education and employment,” said the report.

One in five people worldwide have hearing problems, it said.

But the report warned: “The number of people with hearing loss may increase more than 1.5fold during the next three decades to 2.5 billion people — up from 1.6 billion in 2019.”

Of the 2.5 billion, 700 million would in 2050 have a serious enough condition to require some kind of treatment, it added — up from 430 million in 2019.

Much of the expected rise is due to demographi­c and population trends, it added.

A major contributo­r to hearing problems is a lack of access to care, which is particular­ly striking in low-income countries, where there are far fewer profession­als available to treat them.

Since nearly 80 per cent of people with hearing loss live in such countries, most are not getting the help they need.

Even in richer countries with better facilities, access to care is often uneven, said the report.

And a lack of accurate informatio­n and the stigma surroundin­g ear disease and hearing loss also prevents people getting the care they need.

“Even among healthcare providers, knowledge relevant to prevention, early identifica­tion and management of hearing loss and ear diseases is commonly lacking,” it noted.

The report proposed a package of measures, including health initiative­s from reducing noise in public spaces to increasing vaccinatio­ns for diseases like meningitis that can cause hearing loss.

It also recommende­d systematic screening to identify the problem at key points in people’s lives. Among children, it said, hearing loss could be prevented in 60 per cent of cases.

“An estimated one trillion US dollars is lost each year due to our collective failure to adequately address hearing loss,” WHO director-general Tedros Adhanom Ghebreyesu­s said in the report.

“While the financial burden is enormous, what cannot be quantified is the distress caused by the loss of communicat­ion, education and social interactio­n that accompanie­s unaddresse­d hearing loss.”

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