Abstract
Objective
To understand the nature of mental health discussions in audiological rehabilitation, specifically, the types of conversations, when and how they are initiated, and the participant factors associated with discussing mental health.
Design
A cross-sectional descriptive survey including quantitative (multiple choice) and qualitative (free-text) questions regarding mental health discussions between audiologists and clients.
Study sample
A convenience sample of 118 Australian audiologists working in adult audiological rehabilitation.
Results
The majority of participants (95.8%) reported having engaged in discussions with clients about mental illness and health at some point throughout their career. The frequency of these discussions varied across participants: 7% rarely discuss, 50% discuss occasionally, 30% discuss with about half their clients and 13% have discussions with most clients. Many participants (85.6%) reported that clients would initiate these conversations, most often via disclosing the impacts of hearing loss on clients’ lives.
Conclusions
Most audiologists will encounter clients with mental health concerns, and many will engage in conversations about psychological symptoms, therefore, training audiologists to recognise and address verbal and non-verbal cues regarding mental health may help to promote person-centred care and potentially improve outcomes.
Acknowledgements
The authors thank the participants for their time and perspectives and thank Australian Rotary Health and The Rotary Club of Terrigal District for their scholarship funding to the first author.
Disclosure statement
The authors have no relevant conflicts of interest to report.