News / Document Search Results
3/29/2011
LEND Audiology Clinical Projects, UNC Chapel Hill
Clinical Projects by LEND Audiology Trainees
LEND Audiology Trainees at the Center for Development and Learning at the University of North Carolina complete a mentored project each year. Some of the projects listed in this document have also been presented at state and national meetings.
3/29/2011
Literature Review for Autism and Deafness
JFK Partners at University of Colorado-Denver
This review explores the prevalence of co-morbid hearing loss and autism, characteristics of auditory processes in autistic individuals, behavioral and electrophysiological methods of evaluation, and clinical issues arising from the co-occurrence of autism and hearing loss.
5/14/2010
Annual EHDI Data
Please Note: Data from the CDC EHDI Hearing Screening and Follow-up Survey for years 2005, 2006 and 2007 reflects data that states and territories have actually documented without any estimation. As a result, data reported by CDC EHDI may differ from other national sources.
5/14/2010
Completed Research Projects With CDC-EHDI Funding
(Updated January 2008)
Please follow the link for more information about several research projects.
5/14/2010
Ongoing Research Projects With CDC-EHDI Funding
(Updated October 2006)
This link provides more information about several research projects.
5/14/2010
Publications
Publications related to the Early Hearing Detection & Intervention (EHDI) Program.
5/14/2010
Research and technical assistance centers
This is a link related to the Early Hearing Detection & Intervention (EHDI) Program.
5/14/2010
The Genetics of Infant Hearing Loss
Hearing loss has many causes: some are environmental (such as certain infections in the mother during pregnancy, or infections in the newborn baby), and some are genetic. A combination of environmental factors and genes also could cause hearing loss.
5/14/2010
Universal Screening for Hearing Loss in Newborns
Children with hearing loss have increased difficulties with verbal and nonverbal communication skills, increased behavioral problems, decreased psychosocial well-being, and lower educational attainment compared with children with normal hearing. Because half of the children with hearing loss have no identifiable risk factors, universal screening (instead of targeted screening) has been proposed to detect children with permanent congenital hearing loss (PCHL). There is good evidence that newborn hearing screening testing is highly accurate and leads to earlier identification and treatment of infants with hearing loss.
5/14/2010
Update: Risk of Bacterial Meningitis in Children with Cochlear Implants January 2006
Many people have received cochlear implants to help them hear and communicate. CDC and the Food and Drug Administration (FDA) carried out a study in 2002 to learn more about a possible link between cochlear implants and bacterial meningitis in children with cochlear implants. This study found that bacterial meningitis occurred more often in children with all types of cochlear implants than in children of the same age group in the general population.