The Stigma of Wearing Hearing Aids in an Adolescent Aboriginal Population

A. Strange, April N. Johnson, Brigitte-Jane Ryan, A. Yonovitz
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引用次数: 21

Abstract

The occurrence of otitis media (OM) and associated conductive hearing loss in rural and remote Aboriginal communities is extraordinarily high. Despite the increasing number of people experiencing difficulties with hearing, hearing aids are not being used to the extent that they should be given the magnitude of the hearing problem. This study explored whether a 'Hearing Aid Effect' (HAE) (negative stigma attached to the presence of a hearing aid) is a basis for the lack of amplification use. A sample of Northern Territory Indigenous adolescents boarding at high schools in Alice Springs participated and were asked to judge, using a purpose-designed attitude scale, 12 photo - graphs of male and female peers wearing a behind the ear hearing aid, or a bone conductor hearing aid or wearing no hearing aids. The results indicated that the more visible the hearing aid, the more negatively the adolescents viewed the individual. There was also a trend towards a response bias as a function of the gender of the hearing-aid user. Interestingly, it was found that a brief intervention explaining the benefits of hearing aids provided some desensitisation to the bias of the HAE indicated by reduced stigma in participants.
青少年原住民族群佩戴助听器的污名
中耳炎(OM)和相关的传导性听力损失的发生率在农村和偏远的土著社区是非常高的。尽管听力有问题的人越来越多,但助听器的使用并没有达到应有的程度,因为听力问题的严重性。本研究探讨了“助听器效应”(HAE)(佩戴助听器带来的负面耻辱感)是否是缺乏扩音使用的基础。在艾丽斯斯普林斯寄宿高中的北领地土著青少年样本被要求使用一个专门设计的态度量表来评判12张男女同学的照片,照片中有戴耳后助听器的,有戴骨导式助听器的,也有不戴助听器的。结果表明,助听器越显眼,青少年对个人的看法就越消极。助听器使用者的性别也有反应偏差的趋势。有趣的是,研究发现,解释助听器益处的简短干预提供了一些对HAE偏见的脱敏,这表明参与者的耻辱感减少了。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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