哥斯达黎加儿童感音神经性听力损失患病率

G T Mencher, J J Madriz Alfaro
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引用次数: 25

摘要

关于拉丁美洲和中美洲儿童听力损失的信息非常有限。哥斯达黎加是一个和平、组织有序的国家,拥有出色的医疗保健系统和非常好的道路、项目和服务基础设施。它是一项四阶段研究的地点,旨在确定该地区儿童感音神经性听力损失的发病率和流行率。这四个阶段包括:(1)在公立学校筛选超过12500名儿童,(2)检查参加听障项目的儿童,(3)在社区寻找不在学校或特殊项目的儿童,以及(4)设计广泛的问卷调查,以获得该国听障儿童的基本人口统计数据。问题包括年龄、病因和助听器使用情况。第1和第2阶段的结果在此报告。按照每1000名活产婴儿中平均有1.368名活产婴儿(36个国家的报告数据)计算,哥斯达黎加的听力受损儿童预计将达到约1068名。在结束前两个阶段的研究后,确定哥斯达黎加听力受损儿童的实际人数在1174到1274之间。也就是说,每1000名活产婴儿中听力受损的比例在1.50至1.63之间,完全在其他地方报道的范围之内。由于这是对拉丁美洲国家的首次全国性研究,该信息意义重大,表明该地区听力损失的普遍流行程度与欧洲和北美的发达国家相同。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
Prevalence of sensorineural hearing loss in children in Costa Rica.

There is very limited information available about hearing loss in children in Latin America and in Central America in particular. Costa Rica is a peaceful, well-organized country with an excellent health care system and a very good infrastructure of roads, programs, and services. It served as the site for a four-phase study to determine the incidence and prevalence rate for sensorineural hearing loss in children in that region of the world. The four phases involved (1) screening over 12,500 children in the public schools, (2) examining those enrolled at programs for the hearing impaired, (3) searching the community for children not in schools or special programs, and (4) an extensive questionnaire designed to obtain basic demographic data about hearing-impaired children in the country. Included were questions about age of identification, etiology, and hearing aid use. Results of phases 1 and 2 are reported here. Using a 1.368 per 1,000 live birth average (a figure reported for 36 nations), the projected number of hearing-impaired children in Costa Rica should be about 1,068. After concluding the first two phases of the study, it was determined that the actual number of hearing-impaired children in Costa Rica is between 1,174 and 1,274. That is a ratio of between 1.50 and 1.63 hearing impaired per 1,000 live births, well within the ranges reported elsewhere. Since this is the first national study of a Latin American country, that information is significant, suggesting that the general prevalence of hearing loss in that part of the world is the same as in the developed nations of Europe and North America.

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