Reducing Childhood Hearing Loss in an Alaska Native Population Through a New School Screening and Referral Process That Utilizes Mobile Health and Telemedicine
- Conditions
- Hearing Loss
- Registration Number
- NCT03309553
- Lead Sponsor
- Norton Sound Health Corporation
- Brief Summary
Hearing loss is a common health problem in Alaska. Up to 75% of children growing up in Alaskan villages experience frequent ear infections, one of the major treatable causes of hearing loss. Children with even mild hearing loss face many challenges. These children often experience speech and language delays and have trouble in school. Teens with hearing loss are more likely to drop out of school, and are at risk for having difficulty finding jobs as adults. Promptly diagnosing and treating hearing loss is important for preventing these consequences. Alaska mandates school-based hearing screening, but many children with hearing loss are not identified by the current screening protocol, and most who are referred never make it into the healthcare system for diagnosis and treatment.
Alaska has already developed innovative strategies to address hearing loss. A network of village health clinics staffed by community health aides provide local care, and telemedicine has been adopted in over 250 village clinics statewide. Despite being widely available, telemedicine has not yet been used in school hearing screenings to speed up the referral process.
Norton Sound Health Corporation has partnered with Duke and Johns Hopkins Universities to explore whether a new school screening and referral process that incorporates mobile, or mHealth, screening and telemedicine referral will reduce childhood hearing loss disparities in the Norton Sound region. Children from kindergarten through 12th grade in 15 Norton Sound villages will receive the current school screening protocol and the new mHealth screen. Villages will then be randomized to continue the current primary care referral process or to adopt telemedicine referral for school screenings. The investigators hypothesize that the new mHealth screening protocol will identify more children with hearing loss, and telemedicine referral will reduce time to diagnosis. By better identifying hearing loss and speeding up diagnosis and treatment, the investigators expect the burden of childhood hearing loss to drop, hearing-related quality of life to improve, and school performance to improve in villages with telemedicine referral compared to current primary care referral villages. If the study shows these positive effects, mHealth screening and the telemedicine referral process could be implemented in school districts across the state of Alaska to reducing childhood hearing loss disparities statewide.
- Detailed Description
Not available
Recruitment & Eligibility
- Status
- COMPLETED
- Sex
- All
- Target Recruitment
- 1481
- Student of the Bering Strait School District (BSSD) in Alaska
- All school-aged children, from Kindergarten through 12th grade in the school district are eligible to participate
- Parental signed consent to undergo routine hearing screening in the school setting
- Verbal assent from children enrolled in the study
- Not a student of the Bering Strait School District
- Parental consent for routine hearing screening not obtained
- Verbal assent not obtained
Study & Design
- Study Type
- INTERVENTIONAL
- Study Design
- PARALLEL
- Primary Outcome Measures
Name Time Method Time to diagnosis From date of screening to date of ICD-10 ear/hearing diagnosis, measured in days, up to 9 months from date of screening in Year 1 and Year 2 Comparing time to International Classification of Disease, Tenth Edition (ICD-10) ear/hearing diagnosis from date of screening between intervention and active comparator
- Secondary Outcome Measures
Name Time Method Change in prevalence of hearing loss Annual audiometric assessment at Year 1 and Year 2 Based on audiometric assessment criteria, compared between intervention and active comparator
Change in hearing-related quality of life Annual questionnaire assessment at Year 1 and Year 2 Measured using Hearing Environments and Reflection on Quality of Life (HEAR-QL) questionnaire, compared between intervention and active comparator
Change in school performance 3 times annually in Year 1 and Year 2 Measure of math and reading performance using AIMSweb, compared between intervention and active comparator
Trial Locations
- Locations (1)
Norton Sound Health Corporation
🇺🇸Nome, Alaska, United States
Norton Sound Health Corporation🇺🇸Nome, Alaska, United States