Newborn Hearing Screening Program

 

Sections

The Department of Health, Children’s Medical Services, administers the Newborn Hearing Screening Program (State EHDI Program). The program promotes and supports statewide newborn hearing screening and follow-up services.

New Mexico Newborn Hearing Screening Program goals are:

The above goals reflect the 1 – 3 – 6 national goals for state EHDI Programs. The program works in collaboration with birthing hospitals, licensed midwives, parents, primary care physicians (medical home), Indian Health Services, audiologists, ENTs, and the early intervention system to assure that all infants with hearing loss are identified as early as possible and provided with timely and appropriate audiological, medical and early intervention services.

 

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Importance of Newborn Hearing Screening

Significant hearing loss is the most common condition present at birth. About 80 New Mexico infants are born each year with a significant hearing loss. The consequences of hearing loss of any severity or type are profound for children and their families. In 2000, the Joint Committee on Infant Hearing stated that without auditory input and the opportunity to learn language, children with hearing loss almost always fall behind their peers in language, cognition, and social-emotional development. They also have difficulties attaining the same level of academic achievement as their hearing peers. Several studies have shown that deaf children by age 8 are already 1.5 years behind their hearing peers in reading comprehension scores, and half of deaf children graduate from high school with a 4th grade reading level or less. Early identification of hearing loss, fitting of high-quality hearing aids, cochlear implants and comprehensive early intervention services can minimize or avoid many negative outcomes experienced by children with hearing loss including improved school performance, communication skills, and speech-language development; better social skills and emotional health; decreased family stress; and improved quality of life.

Cover Photo of the English Brochure Foto de la portada del folleto Español

 

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Hospital Screening Programs

Since 2001, New Mexico birthing hospitals have been required by law to screen newborns prior to discharge (New Mexico Administrative Code 7.7.234). Hospitals use the Newborn Hearing Screening Referral Form to refer infants who do not pass the hearing screen or who have risk factors for hearing loss to the Newborn Hearing Screening Program. The form is faxed or mailed to the program within 24 hours of an infant’s birth.

Hospitals must also report monthly data on all births, newborn hearing screen results, newborns discharged without a hearing screen, and parents who decline the hearing screen to the Department of Health Newborn Hearing Screening Program.

The Newborn Hearing Screening Program recommends that birthing hospitals who provide outpatient newborn hearing screens schedule these during discharge to help ensure that parents bring their infants back during the first month of life.

 

 

 

 

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Medical Home

Since 1999, the Joint Committee on Infant Hearing has advocated for appropriate and necessary care for the infant with hearing loss to be directed and coordinated by the child’s physician within the medical home with support from appropriate ancillary services.

Families look to their baby’s physician for answers and direction at each of the stages of the newborn hearing screening process. New Mexico’s universal newborn hearing screening program is the first step, and infants who don’t pass (refer) on their newborn hearing screen must be linked in a timely manner to audiological and medical assessment. Infants with confirmed hearing loss must be referred to early intervention services.

The New Mexico Physician Roadmap provides information to support physicians in linking infants who do not pass their newborn hearing screen to needed follow-up. Physicians also monitor infants and young children who have risk factors for delayed onset or progressive loss and provide referrals for ongoing diagnostic audiological assessment in accordance with their type of risk factors.

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

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Audiologists

Infants with hearing loss who receive timely and appropriate diagnostic audiology services (completed as soon as possible and by three months of age) have positive communication and language outcomes.

Infants who refer on the initial hearing screen and the rescreen in one or both ears are referred by their physician for a diagnostic audiological assessment before three months of age and for ongoing audiological assessment as needed. A list of audiologists trained in infant diagnostic audiological assessment is maintained by the Newborn Hearing Screening Program.

An infant identified with a hearing loss should be fit with hearing aids (if recommended) as soon as possible. Audiologists fax or mail the Report of Audiological Results Form to report the results of diagnostic audiological assessment to the Newborn Hearing Screening Program for children birth though age four years.

 

 

 

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Early Intervention

Research consistently demonstrates that infants who are deaf or hard of hearing who begin early intervention services no later than six months of age “perform as much as 20 to 40 percentile points higher on school-related measures (vocabulary, articulation, intelligibility, social adjustment, and behavior)”.

The Department of Health, Family Infant Toddler (FIT) Program has had a protocol in place since September 2001 for consultation and services from the NMSD Early Intervention Program for infants and toddlers who are deaf or hard of hearing. The goal of this protocol is to ensure that specific expertise is available for families of deaf or hard of hearing infants and toddlers and to the other early intervention providers who may also be providing services.

The Newborn Hearing Screening Program refers children with confirmed hearing loss to the NMSD Early Intervention and Involvement Division. The Newborn Hearing Screening Program also refers families to the NMSD Early Intervention and Involvement Division when their children have a suspected hearing loss and are going through the diagnostic process. The NMSD Early Intervention and Involvement Division will provide information and support to the family until the infant’s hearing loss is either confirmed or ruled out.

The Newborn Hearing Screening Program refers children with conductive hearing loss that persists during the first few months of life and is not resolved by six months of age to their local early intervention program.

 

Roadmap

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Documentos en EspaÑol

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Families

The Newborn Hearing Screening Program makes phone and letter contact with families of infants who need follow-up support. The program works collaboratively with the parents and the medical home to assure that infants receive needed audiological and early intervention services and supports.

The program provides families with information, assists with scheduling audiological appointments, and makes needed referrals to early intervention services, etc.

 

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Contact Info »

Tammy Voisine
2040 S. Pacheco
Santa Fe, NM 87505

505-476-8852
1-877-890-4692

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