The population in rural Alaska, which is predominately Alaska Native, experiences a disproportionately high burden of hearing loss compared to the general US population. The impact of untreated hearing loss in early childhood is tremendous and has grave implications for school achievement. Preschool children with hearing loss experience speech and language delays and are less likely to be ready for kindergarten than their normal-hearing peers. Early identification and treatment can reverse these ill effects. Importantly, the majority of hearing loss in this age group in rural Alaska is infection-mediated, arising from acute and chronic otitis media that is treatable. In response, preschool hearing screening is federally mandated at all Head Start centers across the country. In accordance with this mandate, hearing screening is already performed by the three organizations that offer early childhood education in the Norton Sound region: Kawerak Inc, RurAL CAP, and Bering Strait School District. While the concept of screening in this age group is well established nationally, what is less well understood is the optimal screening protocol for preschool children. There is little evidence evaluating sensitivity and specificity of different screening protocols in this age group. Further, loss to follow up in the referral stage is a problem in preschool hearing screening just as it is in school hearing screening. 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 to speed up the referral process for preventive services such as hearing screening. Norton Sound Health Corporation has partnered with Duke and Johns Hopkins Universities to evaluate hearing screening and referral processes in early childhood education in the Norton Sound region of northwest Alaska. Preschool children will receive screening from the preschool and a new mHealth screening protocol. These will be compared against a benchmark audiometric assessment to determine sensitivity and specificity. Communities will then be randomized to continue the current primary care referral process or to adopt telemedicine referral. The primary outcome will be time to ICD-10 ear/hearing diagnosis. Secondary outcomes will include sensitivity and specificity of screening protocols and prevalence of hearing loss. The goal of this study is to evaluate the optimal screening and referral strategy for preschool children in rural Alaska.
Study Type
INTERVENTIONAL
Allocation
RANDOMIZED
Purpose
HEALTH_SERVICES_RESEARCH
Masking
SINGLE
Enrollment
155
Children who refer hearing screening will receive the same referral method each preschool had been using previously. This process involves a letter home to the parents, either sent with the child or by mail, requesting that the parent/caregiver bring the child to village health clinic for an evaluation.
In communities randomized to the expedited telemedicine intervention, parents of children who refer hearing screening will receive a phone call from the school or the clinic on the day of screening notifying them of the day and time of their child's telemedicine consultation appointment. Appointments will be made with community health aides (CHAs) who have dedicated time blocked off to perform telemedicine consults. Participating children who refer screening will be transported to clinic for their appointment with adult chaperones. Parent participation will be required unless parents direct otherwise. Nonparticipating children in communities assigned to the expedited telemedicine intervention arm will receive standard referral following the current school primary care referral process.
Norton Sound Health Corporation
Nome, Alaska, United States
Time to diagnosis
Comparing time to International Classification of Disease, Tenth Edition (ICD-10) ear/hearing diagnosis from date of screening between intervention and active comparator
Time frame: From date of screening to date of ICD-10 ear/hearing diagnosis, measured in days, up to 9 months from date of screening
Sensitivity and specificity of screening protocols
School and mobile health (mHealth) screening to audiometric assessment, all measured on the same day in Baseline before intervention
Time frame: Cross-sectional comparison of concurrent mHealth screening protocol and current preschool hearing screening to audiometric assessment, measured once in the 2018-2019 academic year, all communities combined
Prevalence of hearing loss
Estimating baseline prevalence of hearing loss in preschool children using audiometric assessments, all communities combined
Time frame: Baseline before intervention
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