Kids with cochlear implants more confident, finds study | Deaf Network of Texas
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Kids with cochlear implants more confident, finds study

Wednesday, February 3, 2010
By Deaf Network

Kids with cochlear implants more confident, finds study

by Pankhuri Kapoor – February 2, 2010

Dallas, Texas, February 2 — The findings of a latest research prove that
deaf kids with cochlear implants have as high a quality of life as kids who
have normal hearing.

Researchers from the Dallas Cochlear Implant program initiated this study to
answer the queries of parents regarding the cochlear implant surgery and
help them in deciding about getting cochlear implants for their babies.

Dr Betty A. Loy, lead author of the research informs, “They want to know:
‘Is my kid going to be made fun of? Is my kid going to be bullied? How is my
kid going to feel about themselves with this apparatus on their head?”

“For profoundly deaf children who regularly use a cochlear implant, feelings
about life overall are no better or worse than their hearing peers. These
findings indicate that cochlear implantation has a positive effect on
certain psycho-social domains,” she adds.

What is a cochlear implant?
A cochlear implant is an electronic device that helps in reinstating partial
hearing in deaf people through the Otolaryngology surgery (head and neck
surgery) that implants the device in the inner ear and is activated by
another device worn outside the ear.

This device detours the damaged parts of the aural system of the body and
directly stimulates the hearing nerve which enables the deaf to hear the
sounds.

Study Details
84 deaf kids in the age bracket of 8 to 16 years, who had previously
undergone cochlear implants, took part in this study that examined the
effect of the implant on the life of these kids.

The study participants were questioned on their feelings about themselves,
their family members, friends and school. Parents of these kids were also
asked similar questions and the results helped the researchers in arriving
at the conclusions of this research.

The researchers also examined the responses of 1,501 normal kids in the same
age group, and the results were then compared.

Results of the questionnaire showed that overall quality of life (QOL) was
similar in kids of both the groups, but the children with cochlear implants
were found to have a notion that their QOL was lesser than their normal
peers.

Deaf kids are pessimistic
Previous research has revealed that hearing-impaired kids have more
difficulty in making friends and feel less socially accepted than normal
children in the same age group.

And the cochlear implants can help in boosting their confidence, as it
improves verbal communication and language development in deaf people.

The study and its findings have been published in the February issue of the
journal, Otolaryngology – Head and Neck Surgery.

Source:
http://www.themedguru.com/20100202/newsfeature/kids-cochlear-implants-more-confident-finds-study-86132149.html

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2 Responses to “Kids with cochlear implants more confident, finds study”

  1. Frank A. Brauer

    A cochlear implant is an electronic device that helps in reinstating partial
    hearing in deaf people – Copied from this article and too humbly spoken!

    The Cochlear implant does “miraculous” wonders far better than “partial” as stated in the article as the definition. It is an insult to describe the Cochlear implant in such a reserved way. What is most important that if you are contemplating getting an implant that you get an assessment done by a reputable doctor as the one my wife got hers done by. His name is Dr. Peters of Medical City in Dallas, Texas. One day I’m sure it will be my turn to get it done. My wonderful wife now hears better than me and no longer needs to read lips. The first year is rough but after that, it just gets better and better. Attend a local Cochlear support group to consult with others that can give you their personal success stories. I’m just married to a cochlear implant wearer and that’s my testimony that I have seen with my own two eyes. I was raised as a deaf child that wore a huge hearing aid box on my chest with a bra strap like contraption with twisted wires going to both of my ears. Yes, I’d would have blended in much better if I could have heard as well as a cochlear implant wearer but I can speak as an authority it’s not what you see the wearer have on but whether the device works to not just “help” but eliminate and that is what the cochlear implant does, it eliminates deafness! How I love technology!

    #188817
  2. Erika Wentworth

    This article, and this study was very slanted, and the not-so-hidden assumption is that Deaf children who do not get cochlear implants have extraordinary difficult or unhappy lives. The comparison group of “normal” children did not include Deaf children who use ASL and live perfectly happy lives themselves. This is not the kind of unbiased article or study that I like reading about. Instead, it reads as an advertisement for cochlear implants. I am very disappointed to have read this article in this online newspaper.

    #188853

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