Health Sciences
Jennifer Deal, PhD (she/her/hers)
Associate Professor
Epidemiology
Johns Hopkins University
Baltimore, Maryland, United States
Kathleen Pichora-Fuller, MSc, PhD, FCAHS (she/her/hers)
Professor Emerita
Psychology
University of Toronto
Toronto, Ontario, Canada
Julia Toman, MD MPH FACS (she/her/hers)
Assistant Professor
Department of Otolaryngology
University of South Florida
Tampa, Florida, United States
Penny Lewis, MPharm, PhD
Senior Clinical Lecturer
Division of Pharmacy & The National Institute for Health Research Applied Research Collaboration-Greater Manchester
The University of Manchester
Manchester, England, United Kingdom
Hearing is fundamental to communication and important for quality of life and overall health of older adults. Despite a potentially large role in how patients engage in healthcare, its importance is underrecognized in healthcare settings. Decreased patient-provider communication and poor treatment understanding may drive decreased satisfaction with healthcare services and avoidance of routine medical care, resulting in poorer health outcomes for older adults with hearing loss. Additionally, despite a high prevalence of hearing loss, less than 20% of those who could potentially benefit from hearing healthcare use hearing aids, potentially exacerbating sequalae of hearing loss in healthcare settings. Amidst growing recognition of the need for inter-professional healthcare collaboration, this session will focus on how audiologists and hearing specialists may partner with other healthcare providers (pharmacists, nurses, physicians) to address hearing needs in primary care, specialty care and hospital settings. We will include perspectives from the United Kingdom, the United States and Canada. We will describe factors that facilitate and impede communication between pharmacists and patients with hearing loss in the community pharmacy. We will also present results of a mixed-methods study from an interdisciplinary team (gerontology, public health, audiology, and otolaryngology/ear nose throat (ENT)) to inform primary care/ENT physicians about preferences for hearing treatment among Black women in the United States. Within a hospital setting, we will present how audiologist-nurse partnerships impact delirium. We will conclude with a discussion of how policy for hearing aid coverage impacts primary care providers recommendations for hearing healthcare in the United States.
Individual Symposium Abstract First Author: Julia Toman, MD MPH FACS (she/her/hers) – University of South Florida
Individual Symposium Abstract First Author: Penny J. Lewis, MPharm, PhD – The University of Manchester