top of page

Deafness & Hearing Loss

  • Writer: Atıf Büyüksoy
    Atıf Büyüksoy
  • Jul 6, 2018
  • 1 min read

Updated: Oct 12, 2022

Over 5% of the world’s population – or 466 million people – has disabling hearing loss (432 million adults and 34 million children). It is estimated that by 2050 over 900 million people – or one in every ten people – will have disabling hearing loss.

Disabling hearing loss refers to hearing loss greater than 40 decibels (dB) in the better hearing ear in adults and a hearing loss greater than 30 dB in the better hearing ear in children. The majority of people with disabling hearing loss live in low- and middle-income countries.


Approximately one third of people over 65 years of age are affected by disabling hearing loss. The prevalence in this age group is greatest in South Asia, Asia Pacific and sub-Saharan Africa.


Hearing loss and deafness

A person who is not able to hear as well as someone with normal hearing – hearing thresholds of 25 dB or better in both ears – is said to have hearing loss. Hearing loss may be mild, moderate, severe, or profound. It can affect one ear or both ears, and leads to difficulty in hearing conversational speech or loud sounds.


'Hard of hearing' refers to people with hearing loss ranging from mild to severe. People who are hard of hearing usually communicate through spoken language and can benefit from hearing aids, cochlear implants, and other assistive devices as well as captioning. People with more significant hearing losses may benefit from cochlear implants.


'Deaf' people mostly have profound hearing loss, which implies very little or no hearing. They often use sign language for communication.


Source : WHO

Comments


STAY UP TO DATE

Success! Message received.

Maslak Mh. AOS 38. Sk. Çiftkurtlar Plaza Blok N:351/6 Sarıyer / İstanbul

© 2018 by IoT VISION

bottom of page