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Hearing Impaired clinical trials

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NCT ID: NCT02794350 Recruiting - Hearing Impaired Clinical Trials

RBANS-H in Older Patients Before and After Cochlear Implantation: A Protocol for a Prospective Study

RBANS-H-CI-A
Start date: July 2015
Phase: N/A
Study type: Observational

The cognitive profile of older adults with a severe to profound hearing impairment is determined by means of the Repeatable Battery for the Assessment of Neuropsychological Status, adjusted for Hearing impaired subjects (RBANS-H) before and after cochlear implantation. In this prospective, longitudinal study the participants are tested preoperatively, at six months and twelve months postoperatively and from then on yearly up to 10 years after implantation. In addition to the RBANS-H an audiological examination and an semistructured interview is conducted concerning the cochlear implant use and the self-reliance of the patient and subjective questionnaires are filled out by the subjects to assess quality of life and hearing benefit.

NCT ID: NCT01837550 Completed - Hearing Impaired Clinical Trials

Educational Program for Hearing Aid Users With Internet Support

Start date: April 2013
Phase: N/A
Study type: Interventional

The purpose of this study is to examine the short-term effects of complementing an educational program for hearing aid users with Internet support.

NCT ID: NCT01620385 Recruiting - Hearing Impaired Clinical Trials

Cochlear Implant PDA Based Research Platform

ciPDA
Start date: June 2011
Phase: Phase 1
Study type: Interventional

The primary purpose of the research is to study how individuals who wear cochlear implants process sounds in noisy environments and also whether newly designed programs can help improve the communicative ability of cochlear implant patients in noisy situations.

NCT ID: NCT00977418 Completed - Hearing Impaired Clinical Trials

Brain and Cognitive Changes After Reasoning or Physical Training in Cognitively Normal Seniors

Start date: June 2012
Phase: N/A
Study type: Interventional

Seniors 65 years of age and older represent one of the fastest growing segments of society with the population doubling within the next 25 years with dramatic rates of mental decline, costing society billions of dollars each year. The proposed research seeks to discover whether relatively short term mental or physical training can enhance gist reasoning, generalize to untrained cognitive areas and modify/strengthen brain function in areas susceptible to aging processes. To identify neuroprotective and non-pharmacological interventions to prevent mental decline and maximize cognitive brain health during the course of the adult lifespan has major public policy implications.

NCT ID: NCT00037986 Completed - Hearing Impaired Clinical Trials

Functioning, Disability, and Quality of Life in the Adult Hearing Impaired

Start date: July 2001
Phase: Phase 2
Study type: Interventional

The short-term research objectives of the proposed study are as follows: 1. To measure the effects of audiological intervention on selected domain specific (i.e., Communicative, Interpersonal, and Social roles) and overall functioning using the WHO-DASII, a generic health measure conceptually grounded in the ICIDH-2 model of disablement and functioning. 2. To measure the effects of audiological intervention on selected domain specific (i.e., Role Functioning-Emotional; and, Social Functioning) and overall functioning using the MOS-SF36V, a generic health measure currently utilized in the Veteran's Health Administration. 3. To determine the accuracy with which measures of audibility (SII), hearing handicap (HHIE), and, hearing disability (APHAB) predict domain specific and overall functioning, and life-satisfaction as measured by the WHO-DASII and the MOS-SF36V will be evaluated. 4. To compare hearing aid treatment effects as measured by changes in WHO-DASII domain specific and overall functioning scores to those measured by changes in disease specific instruments examining similar constructs. 5. To compare hearing aid treatment effects as measured by changes in MOS-SF36V domain specific and overall functioning scores to those measured by changes in disease specific instruments examining similar constructs. 6. To determine and compare cost-effectiveness of hearing aid intervention as calculated using WHO-DASII and MOS SF-36V outcome data. The long-term research objective is to compare the cost-effectiveness and cost-utility of audiologic intervention with those of other health care interventions commonly associated with the veteran population (e.g. mental health, cardiology, pulmonary, orthopedic, etc.).

NCT ID: NCT00013416 Completed - Hearing Impaired Clinical Trials

Measurement and Prediction of Outcomes of Amplification

Start date: October 1999
Phase: Phase 2
Study type: Interventional

The long-term goal of this research program is to develop methods to predict both the benefit and the satisfaction that hearing-impaired patients will derive from auditory amplification in daily life. This proposal has three primary objectives: (1) To determine the influence of extra-audiological variables, such as personality attributes and expectations, on the subjective outcomes of hearing aid fittings, (2) To establish a scientific basis for selection, administration, and interpretation of self-report measures of hearing aid fitting outcome, (3) To resolve the long-standing debate about the efficacy of using clinically measured loudness perception data in hearing aid prescriptions.

NCT ID: NCT00013364 Completed - Hearing Impaired Clinical Trials

Effects of Stimulus Validity on Speech Recognition

Start date: April 1998
Phase: Phase 2
Study type: Observational

The effects of talker variability will be investigated with four groups of listeners (young normal-hearing; old normal-hearing; young hearing-impaired; old hearing-impaired). Experimental conditions will include between-talker differences, speaking rate, lexical difficult and semantic/linguistic context. A preliminary experiment will evaluate the relative merit of adaptive vs fixed-level methods of stimulus presentation.