Abstract
The Newborn Hearing Screening (NHS) in Schleswig-Holstein (northern Germany) covers about 23,000 newborns a year. In Germany NHS has not yet become "universal" for the state but has voluntary activities in many of its federal countries, predominately based on private sponsorship. In Schleswig-Holstein, a multidisciplinary screening program ("UNHS-SH") was started in December of 2003 involving the departments of pediatric audiology, otolaryngology, pediatrics, obstretrics, social medicine, education, medical informatics, and a quality management group supported by the Schleswig-Holstein-division of the German Medical Association. We aimed to fulfil all claims of the international consensus in regard of screening procedures, quality management, tracking, follow-up, and timing. All of the 28 birth hospitals participate in the screening. In 2005, the mean participation rate was 81.6 %, while seven hospitals reached over 90 %. Lost to follow-up was 1.5% and 16 hard hearing newborns (of the statistically expected 23) were discovered by the UNHSSH. UNHSSH shows that an internet tracking with intensive feedback to screeners and parents is a candidate to overcome the potential drawbacks of a voluntary screening.
Original language | English |
---|---|
Pages | 1237-1250 |
Number of pages | 14 |
Publication status | Published - 2007 |
Event | Medinfo 2007: Proceedings of the 12th World Congress on Health (Medical) Informatics; Building Sustainable Health Systems - Brisbane, Australia Duration: 20.08.2007 → 24.08.2007 |
Conference
Conference | Medinfo 2007: Proceedings of the 12th World Congress on Health (Medical) Informatics; Building Sustainable Health Systems |
---|---|
Abbreviated title | Medinfo 2007 |
Country/Territory | Australia |
City | Brisbane |
Period | 20.08.07 → 24.08.07 |