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Original Article

Adults who report difficulty hearing speech in noise: an exploration of experiences, impacts and coping strategies

, ORCID Icon, & ORCID Icon
Pages 851-860 | Received 26 Sep 2017, Accepted 13 Sep 2019, Published online: 27 Sep 2019
 

Abstract

Objective: Listening difficulties in noise are common, even in those with clinically normal hearing. There is a suggestion that subjective assessment of hearing difficulties may be more closely associated with listening effort and fatigue rather than objective measures of hearing and/or speech perception. The aim of this study was to better understand these perceptual deficits and experiences of this population.

Design: An exploratory survey was distributed to participants with self-reported listening-in-noise difficulties. The primary aim of the survey was to gather information about challenging listening environments, its impact, and preferred rehabilitation strategies. Secondly, responses were compared to their performance on behavioural tasks.

Study sample: Fifty adults aged 33–55 (22 females, with normal or near-normal hearing thresholds), completed the survey, and 45 of these performed behavioural tasks.

Results: Background noise with conversational content was the most common source of hearing difficulties. Participants expended higher concentration and attention when communicating in noise, and correlations with previously published behavioural data was reported. Social impacts varied, few had sought treatment, and respondents preferred training over devices.

Conclusions: Insights gained may provide clinicians and researchers with an understanding of the situations, impacts and non-auditory factors associated with listening-in-noise difficulties, and preferred rehabilitation for these clients.

Acknowledgements

The authors thank all the research participants who took part in this study.

Disclosure statement

The authors of this paper have no conflict of interest to disclose.

Additional information

Funding

This work was supported by the Hearing Industry Research Consortium, the Commonwealth Department of Health, the National Health and Medical Research Council [APP1063905] and the HEARing CRC, established and supported under the Cooperative Research Centres Programme - Business Australia. IY was supported by an Australian Government Research Training Programme Scholarship.

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