klb
06-14-2003, 02:38 AM
My 7 year old daughter took a hearing test in school last year. The results indicated that she had mild hearing loss in one ear. Her physician determined it was due to an inner ear infection. In March this year, one year later, another hearing test at school indicated a mild hearing loss in both ears. Her physician referred me to an ENT and audiologist. The audiologist said that this third test indicated minimal hearing loss in both ears. I believe the doctor said sensorineural loss. The audiologist also mentioned that the test results were based soley on what my daughter indicated she could or could not hear. I'm skeptical of these results, not only because of the audiologist's last comment, but also because my daughter has shown, in my opionion, NO sign of hearing loss. In school she is an average student. Past reports have indicated my daughter frequently answered questions confidently but incorrectly and would sometimes have difficulty reading words after repeated corrections. I asked my daughter how the last hearing test went and she said that "sometimes she felt like the sounds were in her head and not in her ears, so she did nothing." She said the noises were "scratchy", like what she hears at home (whatever that means). Is it possible the test results are showing a hearing loss because she doesn't understand how to do the test correctly? And if she is doing them incorrectly, can a 7 year old consistently show the same result? Could she be having difficulty at school because of the noise level? At home it's not all that quiet, either, and she seems to hear perfectly. She can hear a whisper and when I call her from a different room, she responds. I sound like a mom in denial, but I'm not. I simply don't want to have a diagnosis of "hearing loss" on my daughter's educational and medical records if it's not warranted. I'm not looking for a diagnosis and I do intend to contact her audiologist with these concerns, but for now, I'm looking for opinions. Thanks.

