Weekend Argus (Saturday Edition)

Hearing loss linked with depression

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MILD hearing loss in later life can significan­tly raise the risk of depression, experts say.

They fear the loneliness of being unable to hear friends and family could see people become depressed even from slight deafness.

A study found those with mild hearing loss were far more likely to suffer depressive symptoms than those with normal hearing.

Researcher­s led by Columbia University in New York gave hearing tests to 5 328 people aged 50 and older, then gave them 10 statements to judge their level of depression.

They rated how often they felt happy, lonely and fearful – from rarely or never to every day. They did the same for statements such as “I could not get going” or “I was bothered by things that usually don’t bother me”.

The results show just under a third of older people without hearing loss were depressed.

The rates of depression leapt to almost 45% of those with moderate hearing loss. And in people with severe hearing loss, more than 57% showed signs of clinical depression.

The study, published in the journal JAMA Otolaryngo­logy, concluded that treatment such as hearing aids could improve their mental health.

One in six people in Britain have some form of hearing loss, which affects 11 million of us.

That number rises to two-thirds of people over the age of 70. |

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