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Cochlear Implants International
An Interdisciplinary Journal for Implantable Hearing Devices
Volume 12, 2011 - Issue 2
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Articles

Cochlear-implanted children from homes where English is an additional language: findings from a recent audit in one London centre

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Pages 105-113 | Published online: 18 Jul 2013
 

Abstract

A 5-year retrospective audit of demographic, audiological, and other records of 147 children implanted at one London centre was conducted. The aim was to detail the number of children implanted, with a specific focus on children from families with English as an additional language (EAL), and to compare these children with children from monolingual English-speaking families on a variety of characteristics known to affect paediatric cochlear implant outcomes. In all, 28% of children were from families where English is an additional language, with 15 different languages recorded. There were no differences between EAL and English-speaking children with respect to age of implantation; bilateral versus unilateral implants or hearing levels in better ear. There were differences between these groups in aetiology, in the occurrence of additional needs, and in educational placements. Information about speech and language outcomes was difficult to gather. Conclusions indicate the need for more detailed record-keeping especially about children's home languages for purposes of planning intervention and for the inclusion of children with EAL in future studies.

Acknowledgements

The researcher who worked on this Audit was supported by Advanced Bionics, and we gratefully acknowledge this support. We sincerely thank Ms Amy McConkey Robbins for her helpful review, and her thoughtful comments and suggestions.

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