Kids with hearing loss in 1 ear fall behind in language skills

Washington, May 5 (ANI): Loss of hearing in one ear hurts children’s ability to comprehend and use language, according to a new study.

“For many years, pediatricians and educators thought that as long as children have one normal hearing ear, their speech and language would develop normally,” says lead author Judith E. C. Lieu, MD, a Washington University ear, nose and throat specialist at St. Louis Children”s Hospital.

“But then a few studies began suggesting these children might have problems in school. Now our study has shown that on average, children with hearing loss in one ear have poorer oral language scores than children with hearing in both ears,” Lieu says.

Hearing loss in one ear can stem from congenital abnormalities in the ear, head trauma or infections such as meningitis. Children with hearing loss in one ear may go undetected because they can appear to have normal hearing. Their difficulty hearing may be mistaken simply for lack of attention or selective hearing, says Lieu, assistant professor of otolaryngology.

Even children with recognized one-side hearing loss often aren”t fitted with hearing aids and often don”t receive accommodations for disability.

The study will be published in the June issue of the journal Pediatrics. (ANI)

Pneumonia leading cause of child death in China

London, Mar 27 (ANI): A new study claims that pneumonia is the leading cause of death amongst Chinese children.

The condition accounts for 17 per cent of deaths in under-5s, according to the study.

But the number of children in China who die before reaching the age of five has dropped by 70 per cent since 1990 – from 6.5 per cent of live births to 1.9 per cent.

The research, published in the Lancet journal, was led by the University of Edinburgh.

Harry Campbell, Professor of Genetic Epidemiology and Public Health at the University of Edinburgh, said: “Within international health community, China has been a “black box” for the past several decades regarding the information on health problems of its large population, particularly for children and infants. We welcome their immense efforts in recent years to digitalize their health research reports produced during the 20th century by Chinese researchers. We have now learned that health research conducted in China has been of a very high quality. Our study will also bring attention to some neglected causes of child death, such as accidents and congenital abnormalities, on which we had hardly any information from other low and middle income countries.” (ANI)