Aim: To audit the identification and screening of graduates from a neonatal intensive care unit with risk factors for sensorineural hearing loss.
Methods: Hospital medical records of newborn infants discharged from the neonatal intensive care unit, Christchurch Womens Hospital, between 1 July 1994 and 30 June 1995 (n=564), were examined to identify those at risk for sensorineural hearing loss according to the American Speech-Language Hearing Association risk criteria 1991. Auditory brainstem response test results were obtained from the Christchurch Hospital Audiology Department. Outcome measures were: presence of hearing loss risk factors, numbers tested with auditory brainstem response, age at test and presence and degree of hearing impairment.
Results: Of 5,215 live births in Christchurch, 564 infants were discharged through the neonatal intensive care unit. Of these, 86 had risk factors for sensorineural hearing loss. There were 72 (84%) infants tested at audiology, with fifteen (17%) having abnormal test results. There were fourteen with risk factors who did not get audiology screening.
Conclusion: A high proportion (84%) of high risk newborn infants had auditory brainstem response testing. Further improvement would require strict implementation of standard procedures. Auditory brainstem response screening is part of a wider population surveillance approach to identify hearing loss as early as possible.