# I Hear You, I Feel You: Evaluating the Impact of Hearing Loss among Rural Homebound Older Veterans

**Authors:** Nathan Sheets, Elizabeth Reilly, Sandra Sanchez-Reilly, Jose Mendoza, Michael Mader

PMC · DOI: 10.1093/geroni/igaf122.3606 · 2025-12-31

## TL;DR

This study examines how hearing loss affects the quality of life and caregiver burden among homebound older rural Veterans, finding that severe hearing loss significantly impacts social and emotional well-being.

## Contribution

The study provides new insights into the relationship between hearing loss severity and quality-of-life in homebound rural older Veterans.

## Key findings

- 90% of homebound rural older Veterans had hearing loss, with 69% experiencing moderate-to-severe levels.
- Severe hearing loss was significantly associated with lower emotional and social quality-of-life scores.
- In-home interventions like hearing screening and cost-effective devices are recommended to mitigate decline.

## Abstract

Over 50% older Veterans (OV) live with disabling hearing loss (HL), often undiagnosed and/or untreated. HL consequences include increased depression/dementia risk, PTSD exacerbation, social isolation, caregiver-burden and adverse events when hospitalized. Homebound rural OV consequences of HL remain unknown.

Investigate the relationship between HL, quality-of-life and caregiver-burden among homebound rural OV

Homebound rural OV (Del Rio, TX) were evaluated for HL (audiometer), caregiver-burden (Zarit), hearing-loss-impact-on-quality-of-life measured with Hearing-Handicap-Scale (HHS), and overall quality-of-life (SF-12).

N-19. Median Age 77 (74-81), 58% Hispanic, 100% male. Spouses were main caregivers. 58% had three-­or-more chronic conditions: 63% mental-health-related, 26% cardiac, 21% pulmonary. 42% reported toxic exposures. 90% OV had HL; 69% found to have moderate-to-severe HL (41-70 dB of loss, 84% bilateral). 57% OV exposed to agent-orange had severe HL (p = 0.089). Caregiver-burden scores were higher among OV with severe HL (p=NS) and quality-of-life was not significantly correlated with HL (Physical: p = 0.93, Mental: p = 0.47, Total: p = 0.71). OV with Mild or Normal HL had lower total values of HHS vs. moderate HL (p = 0.035) and severe HL (p = 0.016). Further, both emotional and social HHS components showed negative significant correlations with severe HL (p = 0.013 and p = 0.021, respectively).

Homebound OV likely suffer from multiple chronic conditions including HL (90%). Severe HL affects quality-of-life and causes caregiver-burden. Self-perceived HL social/emotional impairment significantly correlates to HL severity. In-home interventions such as standardized screening and provision of simpler/cost-effective devices (pocket-talker, alternative to hearing-aids) are needed to avoid further decline among homebound rural populations.

## Linked entities

- **Diseases:** depression (MONDO:0002050), dementia (MONDO:0001627), PTSD (MONDO:0005146)

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Source: https://tomesphere.com/paper/PMC12762623