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84 Parent Ratings of Everyday Social, Emotional, and Behavioral Functioning in Children with Unilateral versus Bilateral Hearing Loss
- Samantha Hasenbalg, Rachel Landsman, Matthew Fasano-McCarron, Megan Herlihy, Peter K Isquith
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- Journal:
- Journal of the International Neuropsychological Society / Volume 29 / Issue s1 / November 2023
- Published online by Cambridge University Press:
- 21 December 2023, pp. 76-77
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Objective:
Reduced hearing is associated with increased risk for social, emotional, and behavioral difficulties. Studies to date have typically compared DHH children with their hearing peers without regard for unilateral hearing loss (UHL) versus bilateral hearing loss (BHL). Children with UHL are often perceived as more like their typically hearing peers than their peers with BHL. Children with UHL typically access sound and spoken language which facilitates their functioning with fewer supports (e.g., interpreters, captioning). These children, however, show cognitive, academic, and communication profiles more similar to children with BHL than typically hearing peers. They may also experience similar social, emotional, and behavioral challenges as their BHL peers. We examined social, emotional, and behavioral functioning in a clinically referred sample of children with UHL versus BHL.
Participants and Methods:Parents of 100 children aged 2 to 17 years (M=7.12) with either UHL (n=30) or BHL (n=70) completed the Behavioral Assessment System for Children, Third Edition (BASC-3) as part of neuropsychological evaluation in a Deaf and Hard of Hearing Program within a tertiary pediatric hospital. BASC-3 scores based on General Combined norms were compared to an expected distribution of typically developing hearing children using non-parametric one-sample tests. Profiles of scores for children with UHL and BHL were examined in a repeated measures MANOVA.
Results:The groups of children with UHL and BHL showed similar age, gender, race, ethnicity, and Area Deprivation Index compositions. Eighty four percent of BHL children communicated with spoken language, and 100% of UHL children communicated with spoken language (p=.02). There were similar rates of comorbid diagnoses for ADHD (20%), Anxiety/Depression (18%), Autism Spectrum Disorder (8%), and Intellectual Disability/Global Developmental Delay (9%). However, children with BHL tended to be at greater risk for Language Disorders (50%) than those with UHL (30%, = 3.41 p=.065). Together, children with hearing loss showed significantly higher scores on the BASC-3 Hyperactivity, Aggression, Attention Problems, Atypicality, and Withdrawal clinical scales than expected (One-Sample Kolmogorov-Smirnov Test; p<.01). Profile analysis showed that children with any type of hearing loss had a varied pattern of scores across scales (F(7,686)=4.33, p<.01), with highest scores on Hyperactivity and Attention Problems scales and lowest scores on Somatization. Scale profiles did not differ, however, between UHL and BHLgroups (p=.127).
Conclusions:Children with UHL have access to auditory input, typically enabling early language development more like their hearing peers compared to children with BHL. In turn, these children may be overlooked more so than their BHL peers. However, the likelihood of social, emotional, and behavioral difficulties is similar between the two groups of children with hearing loss, whether that is unilateral or bilateral. Our study showed both groups of children had similar profiles across BASC-3 scales with elevations relative to norms. Measuring these everyday functions in children with hearing loss is important for early detection of risks to promote early intervention.
Chlorhexidine-Impregnated Cloths to Prevent Skin and Soft-Tissue Infection in Marine Recruits: A Cluster-Randomized, Double-Blind, Controlled Effectiveness Trial
- Timothy J. Whitman, Rachel K. Herlihy, Carey D. Schlett, Patrick R. Murray, Greg A. Grandits, Anuradha Ganesan, Maya Brown, James D. Mancuso, William B. Adams, David R. Tribble
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- Journal:
- Infection Control & Hospital Epidemiology / Volume 31 / Issue 12 / December 2010
- Published online by Cambridge University Press:
- 02 January 2015, pp. 1207-1215
- Print publication:
- December 2010
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Background.
Community-associated methicillin-resistant Staphylococcus aureus (CA-MRSA) causes skin and soft-tissue infection (SSTI) in military recruits.
Objective.To evaluate the effectiveness of 2% Chlorhexidine gluconate (CHG)-impregnated cloths in reducing rates of SSTI and S. aureus colonization among military recruits.
Design.A cluster-randomized (by platoon), double-blind, controlled effectiveness trial.
Setting.Marine Officer Candidate School, Quantico, Virginia, 2007.
Participants.Military recruits.
Intervention.Application of CHG-impregnated or control (Comfort Bath; Sage) cloths applied over entire body thrice weekly.
Measurements.Recruits were monitored daily for SSTI. Baseline and serial nasal and/or axillary swabs were collected to assess S. aureus colonization.
Results.Of 1,562 subjects enrolled, 781 (from 23 platoons) underwent CHG-impregnated cloth application and 781 (from 21 platoons) underwent control cloth application. The rate of compliance (defined as application of 50% or more of wipes) at 2 weeks was similar (CHG group, 63%; control group, 67%) and decreased over the 6-week period. The mean 6-week SSTI rate in the CHG-impregnated cloth group was 0.094, compared with 0.071 in the control group (analysis of variance model rate difference, 0.025 ± 0.016; P = .14). At baseline, 43% of subjects were colonized with methicillin-susceptible S. aureus (MSSA), and 2.1% were colonized with MRSA. The mean incidence of colonization with MSSA was 50% and 61% (P = .026) and with MRSA was 2.6% and 6.0% (P = .034) for the CHG-impregnated and control cloth groups, respectively.
Conclusions.CHG-impregnated cloths applied thrice weekly did not reduce rates of SSTI among recruits. S. aureus colonization rates increased in both groups but to a lesser extent in those assigned to the CHG-impregnated cloth Intervention. Antecedent S. aureus colonization was not a risk factor for SSTI. Additional studies are needed to identify effective measures for preventing SSTI among military recruits.
Clinical Trials Registration.ClinicalTrials.gov identifier: NCT00475930.