A smartphone national hearing test : performance and characteristics of users
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Date
Authors
De Sousa, K.C. (Karina)
Swanepoel, De Wet
Moore, David R.
Smits, Cas
Journal Title
Journal ISSN
Volume Title
Publisher
American Speech-Language-Hearing Association
Abstract
PURPOSE : The smartphone digits-in-noise hearing test, called hearZA, was made available as a self-test in South Africa in March 2016. This study determined characteristics and test performance of the listeners who took the test.
METHOD : A retrospective analysis of 24,072 persons who completed a test between March 2016 and August 2017 was conducted. User characteristics, including age, English-speaking competence, and self-reported hearing difficulty, were analyzed. Regression analyses were conducted to determine predictors of the speech reception threshold.
RESULTS : Overall referral rate of the hearZA test was 22.4%, and 37% of these reported a known hearing difficulty. Age distributions showed that 33.2% of listeners were ages 30 years and younger, 40.5% were between ages 31 and 50 years, and 26.4% were older than 50 years. Age, self-reported English-speaking competence, and self-reported hearing difficulty were significant predictors of the speech reception threshold.
CONCLUSIONS : High test uptake, particularly among younger users, and high overall referral rate indicates that the hearZA app addresses a public health need. The test also reaches target audiences, including those with self-reported hearing difficulty and those with normal hearing who should monitor their hearing ability.
Description
Keywords
Smartphone digits-in-noise hearing test, hearZA, South Africa (SA), Characteristics, Test performance, Listeners, Users
Sustainable Development Goals
Citation
De Sousa, K.C., Swanepoel, D.W., Moore, D.R. et al. 2018, 'A smartphone national hearing test : performance and characteristics of users', American Journal of Audiology, vol. 27, no. 3, pp. 448-454.
