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Giving Voice To Deaf Children - Education News Story - KMGH Denver
Each day, more than 30 kids are born with hearing loss in the United States -- making it the most common birth defect. Special education services for these children can top $1 million. Now, a new study tracks how these children can learn to listen, talk and read.
For Khristi Bowman, story time with twins Mollie and Nate is a blessing. The pair were born at the same time, yet Nate knows there’s something different about his sister.
"If we’re twins, we should not be twins because she has ears, but I don’t… medical ears,” Nate said.
Molly, like 12,000 other babies each year, was born with severe hearing loss. At just 2, she got cochlear implant surgery.
“When I take them off, I couldn’t hear, and I can put them back on, and I can hear,” Molly said.
“It was a big decision to make for her, because ultimately that’s what we were doing. We were making it for her and her future, and we didn’t even know if we were doing the right thing,” Khristi Bowman said.
Audiologist Tamala Bradham, from Vanderbilt University, hears that all too often.
"From all the families that I’ve worked with through the years, they’ve always asked, 'What does this mean for my child?'” Bradham said.
Answers may be coming. A new landmark study is following more than 2,000 deaf kids as they learn to communicate. The focus: diagnosing hearing loss early.
A newborn hearing tests costs a hospital less than $50 a baby. However, just 28 states mandate screening of all babies. Fail to catch hearing loss early, and your kid may suffer delays in vocabulary comprehension.
While 30-month-olds who hear learn up to 120 words a month, a 30-month-old deaf child learns one word per month.
For Bradham, it’s personal.
“I’ve grown up with a hearing loss as well, and knowing what my family went through and really not understanding hearing loss, I just really want to make sure that families have information,” Bradham said.
Knowing how youngsters like Molly learn and adapt could be life-changing. She starts mainstream kindergarten this fall.
Research shows kids with hearing loss in even one ear are 10-times more likely to be held back one grade compared to their normal-hearing peers. If screened at birth, infants can be fit with amplification devices at less than 1 month old. Vanderbilt University’s hearing study is taking place in conjunction with 50 other schools in three countries.
Each day, more than 30 kids are born with hearing loss in the United States -- making it the most common birth defect. Special education services for these children can top $1 million. Now, a new study tracks how these children can learn to listen, talk and read.
For Khristi Bowman, story time with twins Mollie and Nate is a blessing. The pair were born at the same time, yet Nate knows there’s something different about his sister.
"If we’re twins, we should not be twins because she has ears, but I don’t… medical ears,” Nate said.
Molly, like 12,000 other babies each year, was born with severe hearing loss. At just 2, she got cochlear implant surgery.
“When I take them off, I couldn’t hear, and I can put them back on, and I can hear,” Molly said.
“It was a big decision to make for her, because ultimately that’s what we were doing. We were making it for her and her future, and we didn’t even know if we were doing the right thing,” Khristi Bowman said.
Audiologist Tamala Bradham, from Vanderbilt University, hears that all too often.
"From all the families that I’ve worked with through the years, they’ve always asked, 'What does this mean for my child?'” Bradham said.
Answers may be coming. A new landmark study is following more than 2,000 deaf kids as they learn to communicate. The focus: diagnosing hearing loss early.
A newborn hearing tests costs a hospital less than $50 a baby. However, just 28 states mandate screening of all babies. Fail to catch hearing loss early, and your kid may suffer delays in vocabulary comprehension.
While 30-month-olds who hear learn up to 120 words a month, a 30-month-old deaf child learns one word per month.
For Bradham, it’s personal.
“I’ve grown up with a hearing loss as well, and knowing what my family went through and really not understanding hearing loss, I just really want to make sure that families have information,” Bradham said.
Knowing how youngsters like Molly learn and adapt could be life-changing. She starts mainstream kindergarten this fall.
Research shows kids with hearing loss in even one ear are 10-times more likely to be held back one grade compared to their normal-hearing peers. If screened at birth, infants can be fit with amplification devices at less than 1 month old. Vanderbilt University’s hearing study is taking place in conjunction with 50 other schools in three countries.