# Hearing Care Access Amidst Dementia in Primary Care Practice: Identifying Opportunities to Improve Integration

**Authors:** Danielle Powell, Ariella Sapoznick, Afia Obeng, Christina Koch, Stephanie Nothelle, Esther Oh, Nicholas Reed, Jennifer Wolff

PMC · DOI: 10.1093/geroni/igaf122.3783 · 2025-12-31

## TL;DR

This study explores how older adults with dementia and hearing loss navigate hearing care in primary care settings and identifies ways to improve communication and integration.

## Contribution

The paper introduces insights from co-designed interventions involving patients, care partners, and providers to improve hearing care integration in dementia care.

## Key findings

- Participants emphasized the importance of hearing for health and daily function but noted cognitive concerns often took precedence.
- Older adults and care partners desired provider inquiries about hearing to support connection and function.
- Providers expressed interest in accessible resources but cited limited time to address hearing during visits.

## Abstract

Older adults with hearing loss and dementia face unique communication and care challenges which may inhibit navigation of the hearing care process. Current care models rarely equip primary care providers to initiate hearing care, especially for patients managing dementia. Few interventions have been co-designed with input from persons with dementia, care partners, and providers to understand how hearing needs are addressed outside the audiology clinic. We conducted thematic analysis of semi-structured interviews with primary care providers (n = 6), older adults with hearing loss and self-reported dementia (n = 6), and their care partners (n = 5), recruited from large Mid-Atlantic academic health centers. Most older adults were 76–85, White, male, with ≥5 years of hearing loss, and cared for by a spouse. Providers were predominantly internal medicine physicians with ≥5 years’ experience. Interviews explored four domains: 1) hearing loss impact on life, 2) caregiving perspectives, 3) hearing care needs, and 4) system-level implementation. All participants acknowledged hearing’s value for health and function but recognized cognitive and other concerns often took precedence during visits. Still, older adults and care partners preferred providers inquire about hearing to support connection and daily function. All desired improved interprofessional communication to ease self-advocacy and education burdens. Providers described hearing health as a “black box,” limiting conversation engagement. They expressed interest in accessible educational materials and structured resources to support patient conversations but noted limited time to address hearing during visits. Findings highlight opportunities for practical strategies and interventions to relieve provider burden and improve hearing care integration in primary care.

## Linked entities

- **Diseases:** dementia (MONDO:0001627)

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Source: https://tomesphere.com/paper/PMC12762181