The Hindu (Bangalore)

Hearing loss: Newborn screening gets expanded

Under the newborn hearing screening programme, over 60,000 infants are screened every year using stateofart technology

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As late identification of hearing problems among the newborns can result in permanent hearing loss, newborn screening has been given a priority. Any delay in the identification causes a hurdle in the successful management of children with hearing loss.

AIISH says global standards prescribe that hearing loss should be confirmed by two months of age and treated by three months of age but the age of identification in India is late (beyond 3 years).

Therefore, AIISH has joined hands with the Department of Health and Family Welfare to educate the medical teams working under Rashtriya Bal Swasthya Karyakram (RBSK) and District Early Interventi­on Centre (DEIC) on early screening of communicat­ion disorders in children. With this, newborn screening has been expanded with the number of births being on the rise. Children born with hearing loss will not develop speech since they don’t hear it and therefore early interventi­ons are a must, experts at AIISH said.

AIISH has developed a dedicated newborn screening system (NBS) through which infants are screened for speech, language and hearing disorders within a few days of their birth at bedside in over 20 hospitals in Mysuru city and 30 outreach service centers. Each month, more than 6,000 newborns are screened through the programme and children at risk for speech, language and hearing disorders are identified well within one month of their birth.

About 3 in 1,000 newborns are known to have permanent hearing loss. These infants typically won’t have any overt signs due to which the hearing loss goes undetected unless a hearing screening test is conducted. It is important to know that hearing loss can be accurately identified right at birth through audiologic­al tests, the institute had said in a press release during the expansion of NBS.

AIISH has collaborat­ed with District Early Interventi­on Center (DEIC), Mysuru with the aim of conducting newborn screening in the taluk hospitals on a quarterly basis. The AIISH’s team of experts would visit the taluk hospitals on that day to conduct newborn screening and identify atrisk infants. “By these efforts, more infants and geographic­al regions would be benefitting from the AIISH’s NBS program. Those identified through this screening program will be treated either in DEIC or AIISH as per the convenienc­e of the patients,” according to AIISH.

Under the newborn hearing screening programme, over 60,000 infants are screened every year using the stateofart technology within seven days of their birth at the respective hospitals. The newborns who did not pass the screening test were evaluated in detail within two months of their birth to confirm the presence of hearing loss.

The museum in the shape of a human face that is coming up on the campus of AIISH.

 ?? M.A. SRIRAM ??
M.A. SRIRAM

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