Changes in the Significance of Maternal Rubella As a Factor in Childhood Deafness--1954 to 1982
Overview
Authors
Affiliations
The previously reported reduction in rubella-related congenital deafness in Australian children born since 1977 has been confirmed by a survey of hearing-aid fittings for rubella-related deafness among those born from 1954 to 1982. Analyses of these figures also showed that in more than 50% of individuals born during the period 1954 to 1975, rubella deafness had not been recognized as such, and that mild-to-moderate deafness was a more frequent outcome of maternal rubella than was severe or profound deafness. A prediction has been made of the expected total incidence of hearing-aid fittings to children when rubella accounts for a far smaller percentage of the cases of deafness than in previous years.
Syndromes of hearing loss associated with visual loss.
Abou-Elhamd K, ElToukhy H, Al-Wadaani F Eur Arch Otorhinolaryngol. 2013; 271(4):635-46.
PMID: 23632871 DOI: 10.1007/s00405-013-2514-0.
Cutts F, Robertson S, Samuel R Bull World Health Organ. 1997; 75(1):55-68.
PMID: 9141751 PMC: 2486980.
Hearing impairment among 10-year-old children: metropolitan Atlanta, 1985 through 1987.
Drews C, Yeargin-Allsopp M, Murphy C, DECOUFLE P Am J Public Health. 1994; 84(7):1164-6.
PMID: 8017547 PMC: 1614736. DOI: 10.2105/ajph.84.7.1164.
Matter L, Bally F, Germann D, Schopfer K Eur J Epidemiol. 1995; 11(3):305-10.
PMID: 7493663 DOI: 10.1007/BF01719435.
Stanley F, Sim M, Wilson G, Worthington S Am J Public Health. 1986; 76(1):35-7.
PMID: 3940451 PMC: 1646423. DOI: 10.2105/ajph.76.1.35.