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. 1999 Jul-Aug;114(4):330-6.
doi: 10.1093/phr/114.4.330.

Deafness and mortality: analyses of linked data from the National Health Interview Survey and National Death Index

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Deafness and mortality: analyses of linked data from the National Health Interview Survey and National Death Index

S Barnett et al. Public Health Rep. 1999 Jul-Aug.

Abstract

Objective: To examine the association between age at onset of deafness and mortality.

Methods: The authors analyzed National Health Interview Survey data from 1990 and 1991--the years the Hearing Supplement was administered--linked with National Death Index data for 1990-1995. Adjusting for sociodemographic variables and health status, the authors compared the mortality of three groups of adults ages > or = 19 years: those with prelingual onset of deafness (< or = age 3 years), those with postlingual onset of deafness (> age 3 years), and a representative sample of the general population.

Results: Multivariate analyses adjusted for sociodemographics and stratified by age found that adults with postlingual onset of deafness were more likely to die in the given time frames than non-deaf adults. However, when analyses were also adjusted for health status, there was no difference between adults with postlingual onset of deafness and a control group of non-deaf adults. No differences in mortality were found between adults with prelingual onset of deafness and non-deaf adults.

Conclusions: Adults with postlingual onset of deafness appear to have higher mortality than non-deaf adults, which may be attributable to their lower self-reported health status.

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Comment in

  • Hearing impairment data.
    Battey JF Jr. Battey JF Jr. Public Health Rep. 1999 Sep-Oct;114(5):393. doi: 10.1093/phr/114.5.393. Public Health Rep. 1999. PMID: 10590758 Free PMC article. No abstract available.

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