# Randomised Controlled Trial for the Evaluation of the Efficacy of the IDA’s “Living Well” Online Counselling Tool in First-Time Adult Users with Hearing Loss

**Authors:** Evgenia Vassou, Eleftheria Iliadou, Nikolaos Markatos, Dimitrios Kikidis, Athanasios Bibas

PMC · DOI: 10.3390/audiolres14050071 · 2024-09-19

## TL;DR

This study evaluates an online counseling tool for first-time hearing aid users, finding it helpful despite no major differences in outcomes.

## Contribution

The study introduces the IDA’s “Living Well” counseling tool for first-time hearing aid users and assesses its real-world impact.

## Key findings

- The IDA group showed more consistent improvement in hearing-related handicap scores.
- The IDA group used fewer maladaptive communication strategies.
- Participants found the “Living Well” tool helpful and favorably received.

## Abstract

Effective management of hearing loss through the use of modern hearing aids significantly improves communication and the quality of life for individuals experiencing auditory impairment. Complementary counselling of patients with hearing loss who will be fitted with hearing aids for the first time should be evidence-based and adapted to their individual needs. To date, several counselling protocols and tools have been developed. The aim of this randomised controlled trial study was to investigate the efficacy of the application of the IDA’s “Living Well” counselling tool in first-time hearing aid users in terms of the degree of their hearing related handicap (using the Hearing Handicap Inventory (HHI)), their communication coping strategies (using the Communication Profile for the Hearing Impaired (CPHI)) and their overall satisfaction of the hearing aids (using a Likert scale). Both groups (the IDA and the control group) were fitted with hearing aids and received counselling for their hearing aids by the same audiologist. The IDA group attended an additional counselling session about communication coping strategies with the use of the “Living Well” tool. Both groups’ participants were seen for their hearing aid fittings 4–6 weeks, 3 and 6 months after their fitting when the HHI and the CPHI were measured. Although there was not a statistically significant difference between the two groups for the primary and secondary outcomes, the IDA group did show a more consistent improvement of their HHI score and less frequent use of maladaptive strategies. The “Living Well” counselling tool proved to be a favourably received and helpful counselling tool in first-time hearing aid users.

## Full-text entities

- **Diseases:** Hearing Handicap (MESH:D009422), Hearing Impaired (MESH:D034381), auditory impairment (MESH:D006311)
- **Species:** Homo sapiens (human, species) [taxon 9606]

## Figures

3 figures with captions in the complete paper: https://tomesphere.com/paper/PMC11417736/full.md

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Source: https://tomesphere.com/paper/PMC11417736