Compared to previous studies, the findings show significantly higher prevalence estimates among the oldest age groups: 76.7% for those ages 80-84 years, 91.0% for those 85-89 years, and 96.2% for those 90 years or older. Hearing loss severity for individuals age 80+ was also higher than some previous estimates from NHANES data: 35.8% had mild, 38.8% had moderate, and 9.6% had severe or greater hearing loss. The authors believe the difference might be due to the study's inclusion of underrepresented populations, including the oldest and lower-income individuals. They also discussed the use of different categorical definitions for hearing loss; applying World Health Organization (WHO) updated hearing thresholds results in even higher prevalence estimates.
“The most striking finding is that we knew the prevalence of hearing loss increased with age, but until now, we knew very little about the prevalence in those over 80 years of age,” Dr. Reed told HearingTracker. “This is mostly because we've never had a study like NHATS include hearing measures. NHATS is unique because it focuses on the oldest old Americans and performs in-home visits across the country so it doesn't miss out on participants with travel restrictions. Now we see that, by the time we reach 90 years and older, hearing loss is nearly ubiquitous—over 95% have hearing loss.
“But the deeper numbers are striking,” says Reed. “Among those 90+ years of age, about 75% have moderate or greater hearing loss. This flips the traditional script where we've often assumed the prevalence of hearing loss is high but primarily mild in nature. This is the kind of data we need to appropriately plan public health and policy actions to address hearing loss in the United States.”
The study also points to the need for more granular classifications of hearing loss severity—particularly for the oldest age groups. The authors believe shifting away from a binary description (i.e., “hearing loss” or “no hearing loss”) with more detailed accounting for hearing loss severity should lead to a better understanding of this important, growing patient population and assist in targeted public health planning and resource allocation.
These findings suggest that hearing loss among the oldest old adults (ie, aged 80 years) is more pervasive than previously thought and warrants deeper consideration of discrete severity measures of hearing loss in this population, rather than binary hearing loss terminology."
Another point of emphasis in the study is that about two-thirds of adults older than 71 and nearly all older than 85 have hearing loss, but relatively few use hearing aids. This has important implications for hearing-focused policies and initiatives, such as the Over-the-Counter Hearing Aid Act and Medicare coverage for hearing aids, say the authors. Accurate prevalence estimates are crucial for such initiatives to effectively target and address the needs of individuals with hearing loss.
While future studies with larger samples may increase the precision of estimates among the oldest age groups, the authors note this study provides a significant step forward in better understanding the true extent of hearing loss among older U.S. adults.