Evaluating the health-related quality of life effects of cochlear implants: a prospective study of an adult cochlear implant program

G Hawthorne, A Hogan, E Giles, M Stewart… - … Journal of Audiology, 2004 - Taylor & Francis
G Hawthorne, A Hogan, E Giles, M Stewart, L Kethel, K White, B Plaith, K Pedley…
International Journal of Audiology, 2004Taylor & Francis
This paper prospectively documents the health-related quality of life (HRQoL) and social
participation benefits of adult patients receiving cochlear implants in Australia and New
Zealand. Thirty-four consecutively implanted patients completed the Assessment of Quality
of Life (AQoL) and Hearing Participation Scale (HPS) instruments before implantation, and
at 3–and 6–month follow-ups. Implantation resulted in significant improvements in AQoL and
HPS scores. The effect size was 1.09 for both measures. Those in the top socio-economic …
This paper prospectively documents the health-related quality of life (HRQoL) and social participation benefits of adult patients receiving cochlear implants in Australia and New Zealand. Thirty-four consecutively implanted patients completed the Assessment of Quality of Life (AQoL) and Hearing Participation Scale (HPS) instruments before implantation, and at 3– and 6–month follow-ups. Implantation resulted in significant improvements in AQoL and HPS scores. The effect size was 1.09 for both measures. Those in the top socio-economic tertile obtained the greatest gains. The HRQoL and social participation benefits were slightly larger than those reported elsewhere. This may be because participants used more recent technology (Nucleus 24 rather than Nucleus 22) and received auditory and self-efficacy training as part of their rehabilitation. The results suggest that cochlear implants have a large beneficial effect. They show that social and HRQoL outcomes can be parsimoniously measured using the HPS and AQoL instruments.
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