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- Printed on Friday 18 May 2012 from http://www.cla.asn.au/0805/index.php/accesshealth/articles/inmates-prove-hearing-problems
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3 comments


Comment made by: Anne O'Leary [Visitor]
Great article! There should be a lot more articles like this to bring public awareness to the pandemic situation of middle ear disease amongst our Aboriginal folk.

As the one who conducted these tests, I can only emphasise here the essential need of ear health checks on all inmates (especially Aboriginal) upon entry into any correctional institution throughout Australia. Even better - a standard hearing test on the day of arrest, before any legal proceedings occur. Amazing the thought of being able to hear and understand your counsel - the outcomes could have a radical turn around.

Keep up the good work.
Fri 11 Mar 2011 @ 11:20

Comment made by: damien howard [Visitor]

Great article but needs some clarification on Indigenous kids growing up in chronic pain from middle er disease. Many instances of middle ear disease are asymptomatic see following from 8.26 from senate report. In some cases ear infections in Indigenous children go unreported and untreated, leading to damaged hearing.

The committee heard evidence that whereas many children experience pain associated with ear infections (thereby prompting medical examination of their ears), recent studies found this was not always the case among Indigenous children. Whilst the reason for this is not known, there was some speculation that early onset of otitis media may be a factor:


…a normal eardrum is like a very thin sheet of glass and you can see through it, with a lot of nerve fibres running through it. When the eardrum bulges we think that is what causes the pain. Because when you examine these children they have red bulging drums.


Interestingly, we know that in non-Aboriginal children the pain usually only lasts six to 12 hours, and the bulging does not resolve in that time, so it seems that it is the stretching of the nerves that is painful. It is the initial stretching that causes the pain. We think that in Aboriginal children, who have already had the fluid there for a long time, the drum is much thicker and the nerves just cannot be stretched as much.

Sat 12 Mar 2011 @ 10:15

Comment made by: Bess, Perth [Visitor]
Hi Dr Howard, I just want to say how liberating your psych research in relation to kids with CSOM was. It seems to be some of the most progressive research on the social(education, justice, employment etc) impacts of hearing impairment and ear disease in Australia.

However, the research for the medical side of things is still quite dated in some of the submissions to the hearing health inquiry, although I know that there are a lot of professionals trying really hard to get funding to address these widespread problems.

The pain that comes from having ear disease doesn't go away, it recurs with every cold, wisdom teeth coming through, sore throats - allergies etc., even as adults.

Another of the medical myths widely peddled that really gives me the pip, is that the illness comes from being poor or grubby - that's terrible discrimination. Smoking and allergies are absolutely deadly for causing more bouts, though.

So that sort of myth devalues patients and is disproven rapidly by the fact the condition is intergenerational, whilst environmental factors change over the same timeframe.

People who've been hearing impaired in childhood don't communicate well about pain - they don't recognize it a lot, just like they don't recognize they have a hearing loss, coz they don't know any different. It takes ages for kids to recognize a bout of Glue ear and the pain is evident in their behaviour weeks before they can verbalize that to anyone.

In 10 - 15 minutes appointments, doctors can't derive as much as one can from living with people with this condition, but sometimes they need to listen more and for longer to their patients.
Tue 10 May 2011 @ 19:34

 

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