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Clinical Guidelines: Start Screening at Age 50 for Age-Related Hearing Loss


 

FROM OTOLARYNGOLOGY–HEAD AND NECK SURGERY

‘Primary Care Providers Do Value Guidelines’

However, “Primary care providers do value guidelines. They do value strong recommendations,” he said. We are trying to figure out how we can support people with unaddressed hearing loss in the primary care setting, Dr. McKee said. “Once we get there, we need to advocate for an expansion of coverage,” he said.

The authors note that the messages in the guidelines are important for all clinicians.

“The impact of hearing loss and screening should not be the sole responsibility of an audiologist, an otolaryngologist, nor primary care provider. Any time and place that a patient interacts with the healthcare system is an opportunity for preventive healthcare, such as hearing screening, to occur,” they write.

Funding for this research was provided by the American Academy of Otolaryngology–Head and Neck Surgery Foundation. Dr. Do and Dr. McKee report no relevant financial relationships. Full disclosures of the co-authors are listed with the full text of the paper.

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