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infant hearing screening program
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Infant Hearing Testing Collaboration
Formed
Todd B.Sauter, M.A., CCC-A
Audiology Supervisor - UMass Memorial Medical Center
The Audiology Department at UMass Memorial is extremely fortunate
to have formed a cooperative effort with Dr. Peter Foley,
M.D., Ph.D., Chief of Pediatric Anesthesiology, for auditory
evoked response testing requiring anesthesia. Auditory evoked
response testing is the best objective test of frequency-specific
auditory sensitivity in infants. The test battery includes
the gold standard of tone-burst auditory brainstem
response (ABR) as well as the auditory steady-state
response (ASSR). This testing is extremely accurate
and non-invasive; its only requirement is approximately 60
minutes of consistent sleep.
UMass Memorial is the only center in the region to use a dedicated
pediatric anesthesiologist for this type of procedure, which
maximizes safety for the testing. Also, because the anesthesia
recovery areas of the hospital are utilized, several infants
can be tested in a single time-block. This significantly reduces
the waiting period to have the test scheduled and results
in faster diagnosis.
Equally important, sleep is better controlled than typical
in-clinic sedation, thus a complete, and extremely accurate
frequency-specific test is guaranteed. The need for multiple
tests, which can be emotionally taxing for parents, is eliminated.
As the procedure is not performed in a sound treated room,
intra-aural foam inserts are used to attenuate ambient room
noise. The room is constantly monitored and controlled to
ensure ambient noise does not interfere with test accuracy.
Fast and safe identification of infants and children with
suspected hearing loss is crucial. A delay in diagnosis in
these patients will create an unnecessary delay in intervention
services such as hearing aids, cochlear implants, and oral
or manual communication therapy. Undiagnosed hearing loss
can adversely affect speech and language acquisition, social
and emotional development, and academic achievement. Early,
and accurate detection and intervention can reduce or eliminate
these effects.
Auditory evoked response testing is available for all children
including newborns at UMass Memorial. Anesthesia is utilized
in infants older than 3 months. More information is available
by calling the Audiology Department at 508-856-3996.
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