CHOICES for Parents Sponsors Universal Newborn Hearing Screening Day / Early Testing of Hearing Loss is Vital to Infant Development
Since the state of Illinois mandated three years ago that all birthing hospitals perform a mandatory screening for hearing loss on all newborns before they went home from the hospital, the age of hearing loss detection has decreased from an average of 2½ years to several months.These two years that have been “re-gained” make an extraordinary difference in the life of a young child. Experts agree that undiagnosed hearing loss can result in delayed socialization and social skills, as well as a lifelong disadvantage in linguistic achievement. To recognize the achievements of hospitals who participate in newborn hearing screenings, on April 5,2005, the first "Universal Newborn Hearing Screening Day" for the state of Illinois will be marked in an event in Chicago.
Chicago, IL (PRWEB) April 1, 2005 -- The first-ever Universal Newborn Hearing
Screening Day in Illinois will take place at 1 p.m., Tuesday, April 5, 2005, at
the James R. Thompson Center, Room 9-031, 100 W. Randolph St. in Chicago. The
event is sponsored by Choices for Parents, a coalition of parents and
professionals throughout Illinois that promotes the health and development of
children with newly identified hearing loss by providing their parents with
immediate access to support, information and resources to help families make the
best decisions they can for their children.*
“When parents learn their
child has a hearing loss, it often is a shock,” says Jill Sahakian, director,
Chicago Hearing Society, a division of Anixter Center, one of the largest
nonprofit organizations in Chicago that assists people with disabilities to live
and work successfully in the community. “Ninety percent of deaf babies are born
to hearing parents, so there usually is no family history of hearing loss,” says
Sahakian. Chicago Hearing Society, a founding member organization of Choices for
Parents, is a division of Anixter Center in Chicago.
There has been an
increased emphasis on hearing screening for infants in recent years, explains
Karen Aguilar, coordinator, Choices for Parents. In 2002, the Illinois
legislature mandated that, by the end of 2002, all 135-plus birthing hospitals
in the state must screen the hearing of
newborns before babies go home from
the hospital.
Every day in America, according to the July 2003 edition of
The Hearing Review, approximately one in 1,000 newborns — or 33 babies — is born
profoundly deaf and another two or three of every 1,000 babies are born with a
partial hearing loss, making hearing loss the number-one disability among
newborns in America.
Michael Lotke, MD, has worked with the deaf
community throughout his career as a pediatrician. Lotke operates the pediatric
deaf clinic at Mt. Sinai in Chicago. He says the primary benefit of mandatory
newborn screening is that it has decreased the age of hearing loss detection
from an average of 2½ years of age to several months. These two years that have
been “re-gained” make an extraordinary difference in the life of a young child.
“Undiagnosed hearing loss can result in delayed socialization and social skills,
as well as a lifelong disadvantage in linguistic achievement,” says Lotke.
Additionally, children with undiagnosed and untreated hearing losses can
quickly become isolated from their family members. “A child may even get yelled
at for ‘not listening’ or not paying attention,” says Lotke. He says early
intervention is important, too, so that parents can begin to look at treatments
and strategies, including the learning of sign language, hearing aids and
cochlear implants.
Note: To reach CHOICES for Parents, contact
(312)523-6400; e-mail e-mail protected from spam bots.
* At the reception
to mark Universal Newborn Hearing Screening Day, representatives of various
organizations will speak, including the Illinois Chapter of the American Academy
of Pediatrics and the Office of Gov. Rod Blagojevich. Families of children who
are deaf or hard of hearing also will be present.
Photo credit: Photo
courtesy of Boi-Logic Systems Corp.
Chicago Hearing Society is a division
of Anixter Center, a leading provider of high-quality vocational, residential
and educational options, substance abuse prevention and treatment, and health
care. Anixter Center is an advocate for the rights of people with disabilities
to be full and equal members of the community. Crain’s Chicago Business recently
ranked Anixter Center the 13th-largest nonprofit charitable organization in
Chicago. Note to reporters and editors: For more information about Anixter
Center, please visit http://www.anixter.org/mediaroom/index.htm.
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Source : http://www.prweb.com/releases/2005/4/prweb223809.htm