The Association Between Subjective Hearing Difficulty and Cognitive Impairment: A Stratified Analysis
Dukyoo Jung, Leeho Yoo, Soo Gyung Shin, Sukyung Byeon, Hyein Seo

TL;DR
This study finds that subjective hearing difficulty is linked to cognitive impairment in older adults, with hearing aids potentially offering protection.
Contribution
The study introduces a stratified analysis showing the association between subjective hearing difficulty and cognitive impairment across subgroups.
Findings
Subjective hearing difficulty is significantly associated with cognitive impairment in older adults.
Hearing aid use is linked to a reduced risk of cognitive impairment.
The association between hearing difficulty and cognitive impairment remains consistent across most subgroups.
Abstract
Age-related hearing loss (ARHL) affects 50% of older adults, and has become a global concern due to its adverse impact on cognitive function. However, the effects of ARHL within specific subgroups remain unclear. This study aimed to examine the association between ARHL and cognitive impairment (CI) across diverse subgroups of community-dwelling older adults. This is a cross-sectional study using data from the 2023 National Survey of Older Koreans. Hearing-related characteristics included ARHL diagnosis, subjective hearing difficulty, and hearing-aid (HA) use. Complex sample logistic regression was done to examine the relationship between hearing-related characteristics and CI. A total of 7,419 participants were included in the analysis. Among all participants, subjective hearing difficulty (OR = 3.139, p<.001) and HA use (OR = 0.76, p=.044) were both significantly associated with CI in…
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Taxonomy
TopicsHearing Loss and Rehabilitation · Hearing Impairment and Communication · Vestibular and auditory disorders
