A smartphone national hearing test : performance and characteristics of users

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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.

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Keywords

Smartphone digits-in-noise hearing test, hearZA, South Africa (SA), Characteristics, Test performance, Listeners, Users

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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.