AiiSH-iR

Prevalence of Auditory Hallucinations, and Quality of Life of Individual with Hearing Loss Reported to AIISH

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dc.contributor.author Namitha Jain
dc.date.accessioned 2022-09-06T05:12:40Z
dc.date.available 2022-09-06T05:12:40Z
dc.date.issued 2021
dc.identifier.uri http://203.129.241.86:8080/xmlui/handle/123456789/4781
dc.description.abstract Auditory hallucinations (AH) are conscious perception of sound in the form of meaningful environmental sound, voice or music in the absence of external stimulus. AHs have been linked to schizophrenia and other psychotic disorders for a long time. Recent evidence suggests that AHs are common in non-psychotic people and are sometimes linked to hearing loss. Estimating the prevalence of AHs in the hearing impaired population and assessing their impact are both necessary. The role of an audiologist will be required to investigate this area, identify the pathophysiological mechanism, and develop effective intervention strategies based on the estimated prevalence rates and their impact. Aim: This study aims to estimate the prevalence of AH’s and their impact on hearing impaired individuals. The objectives include; estimating prevalence of AH’s across age ranges, identifying the type and content of hallucinations, assess a relationship between severity of hearing loss and AH’s, estimate an association between configuration of hearing loss and AH’s, and finally compare quality of life outcomes between hallucinating and non-hallucinating individuals. Method: Spontaneous Acoustic Phenomena was used to identify presence and content of hallucinations in 500 individuals age ranging between 18-65 years reported to AIISH in 2019. WHOQOL-BREF, a quality of life measure was administered on 30 hallucinating individuals and the scores were compared to 30 age, gender and diagnosis matched non-hallucinating individuals. Results: The overall prevalence of hallucinations was 8.8%, with higher prevalence in hearing impaired and individuals between the age range of 31-50 years (11.04%). Majority of individuals experienced meaningful environmental sounds and 16% and 11% of hallucinating individuals experienced voice and music, respectively. No correlation was established between severity and AH’s. A significant association between configuration of hearing loss and AH’s was found. No significant difference was found between hallucinating and non-hallucinating hearing impaired individuals. Hallucinating normal hearing individuals scored significantly lower than non-hallucinating counterparts. Conclusion: Higher prevalence in hearing impaired participants indicates the role of auditory pathways in the occurrence of AH’s. Hallucinations adversely impact the quality of life of hallucinating individuals. This necessitates the involvement of an audiologist in the assessment, intervention and future scientific studies on AH’s. en_US
dc.language.iso en en_US
dc.publisher All India Institute of Speech and Hearing en_US
dc.subject Audiology en_US
dc.title Prevalence of Auditory Hallucinations, and Quality of Life of Individual with Hearing Loss Reported to AIISH en_US
dc.type PG Dissertations en_US
dc.degree MSc en_US
dc.dissno 1498 en_US
dc.grantor University of Mysore en_US
dc.guide Sreeraj, K en_US
dc.npages 59 en_US
dc.place Mysuru en_US
dc.terms Auditory hallucinations, Hearing impairment, Non-psychotic, Psychosis, Quality of life, WHOQOL-BREF, Prevalence en_US


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