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Our%20Future

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... to intervention should occur within 48 hours of the diagnosis of hearing loss ... early intervention programs' policies and procedures to reflect best practices ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Our%20Future


1
Our Future
  • Christine Yoshinaga-Itano, Ph.D.
  • University of Colorado, Boulder
  • Department of Speech, Language Hearing Sciences

2
There are schools....
3
...and then there are schools.
4
Whats changed
  • Almost every birthing hospital in the US has
    instituted a newborn hearing screening program.
  • There are 4 million babies born each year in the
    US
  • 2 of every 1000 of these babies will be
    identified with a permanent and significant
    hearing loss
  • Diagnosis of hearing loss should occur by 3
    months of age

5
Whats changed
  • Referral to intervention should occur within 48
    hours of the diagnosis of hearing loss
  • Where are the children going?
  • Currently, the vast proportion of these children
    are referred to Part C, infant/toddler

6
THE PROBLEM
  • Optimal outcomes
  • Require
  • the highest level of expertise
  • in deafness and hearing loss
  • at the very beginning

7
How many children?
  • 8,000 to 12,000 children
  • could be identified each year
  • within the first two months of life

8
Referral to intervention
  • Too many points of entry into the system
  • Public
  • State Schools for the Deaf
  • Education/Health systems
  • Private
  • Public
  • Local Educational Agencies
  • Part C/ Infant-Toddler
  • Families are getting lost in the system or
    appropriate service is delayed.
  • INFANT/TODDLER PART C
  • IS THE MOST COMMON REFERRAL

9
  • NO OUTCOME DATA FOR NON-CATEGORICAL INTERVENTION

10
Deafness/Hearing Loss system
  • All of the successful outcomes data comes from
    programs with specialized services for families
    with children who are deaf or hard of hearing

11
OUTCOME DATA
  • Colorado Home Intervention Program
  • Boys Town Institute Program
  • Washington State Early Intervention Program
  • Ski-HI early intervention programs
  • Auditory-verbal program in UK

12
SINGLE POINT OF ENTRY
  • The Colorado System
  • Birthing Hospitals
  • Diagnostic Audiology
  • Co-Hear Coordinators
  • Categorical intervention services
  • Quality Assurance
  • On-going training
  • Options
  • Sign Language Instruction Deaf/HOH
  • Integrated/Shared Reading Program
  • Families for Hands and Voices

13
Colorado system
  • Referral from diagnostic audiology goes to one of
    9 regional Co-HEAR coordinators, who are
    specially trained early-intervention specialists.
  • Originally, instituted by the Colorado Department
    of Public Health and Environment
  • Now operated through the Colorado State School
    for the Deaf and Blind

14
Co-HEAR system
  • Insures that information provided to parents is
    similar for all families and as unbiased as
    possible
  • Initial counseling and information provided to
    parents is by an individual with a very high
    level of knowledge and experience.

15
(No Transcript)
16
Transition from Diagnosis to Early Intervention
Audiologist Confirms Hearing Loss
Hearing Resource Coordinator is Contacted
Initiates data management
Contacts local agencies
Contacts family
17
Qualifications of the CO-Hear Coordinator
  • Experience working as an interventionist with
    D/HH infants and toddlers
  • Ability to work in partnership with families with
    specific training for parents of children with
    hearing loss
  • Ability to coordinate and organize activities,
    including training about hearing loss, with other
    agencies

18
  • Has sufficient knowledge about infants and
    toddlers who are D/HH to provide technical
    assistance to interventionists and professionals
    from other agencies
  • Ability to assume a leadership role

19
Credentials of the CO-Hear Coordinator
  • CCC-A
  • CCC-SLP
  • Teacher of the D/HH

20
Responsibilities of the CO-Hear Coordinator to
Support the EHDI Program
  • Inputs referral data into the state EHDI program
    database
  • Assists with development and implementation of
    early intervention programs policies and
    procedures to reflect best practices
  • Collects data relevant to early intervention
    program growth program evaluation
  • Monitors customer satisfaction

21
  • Participates on local ICC for Part C
  • Maintains a working relationship with community
    programs (e.g., Part C, Child Find, local school
    district programs, local public health offices)
    by offering information about hearing loss,
    communication approaches, unique assessment needs
    of D/HH children

22
Responsibilities of the CO-Hear Coordinator to
Support Direct Service Providers
  • Hires and assists with training of new
    interventionists
  • Supervises interventionists in the region
  • Disseminates information
  • Organizes regional workshops
  • Monitors and reviews interventionists quarterly
    reports

23
  • Provides 11 mentoring to early interventionists
  • Working with infants
  • Implementing a family-centered approach
  • Supporting selection of a variety of
    communication approaches
  • Expertise in implementing each communication
    approach
  • Learning the art and science of a home visit

24
Responsibilities of the CO-Hear Coordinator to
Support the Family
  • Providing information
  • counseling strategies (e.g., grieving, coping)
  • communication approaches
  • program options
  • Securing funding for amplification and early
    intervention
  • Providing service coordination as the
    identified service coordinator or in
    collaboration with the identified service
    coordinator

25
Recruiting and Training Hearing Resource
Coordinators
  • Identify geographic regions
  • Number of children with hearing loss
  • Realistic driving range
  • Familiarity with the communitys services
    supports
  • Hold regular administrative meetings
  • Provide reimbursement

26
Coordinating with Part C State Level
  • EHDI Advisory Committee
  • EHDI Task Forces
  • Document EHDI system for all stakeholders (e.g.,
    memos, phone conferences, etc)
  • clarify the roles of people and organizations
    that have expertise specific to sensory
    disability
  • An infant or toddler whose primary disability is
    a sensory loss must have an assessment team
    member with expertise specific to infants and
    toddlers with that disability

27
  • When a referral for a child with a sensory
    disability is received, an appropriate resource
    for children with sensory disabilities will be
    contacted so they may participate in initial
    contacts with the family
  • Recommendation that the multi-disciplinary
    assessment include assessment procedures and
    instruments that are appropriate for infants and
    toddlers with hearing loss (e.g., emphasis on
    communication, language, modality, functional
    auditory skills)

28
  • Distribute names of the Hearing Resource
    Coordinators and their respective counties
  • The Hearing Resource Coordinator might be the
    most appropriate person to act as the Service
    Coordinator

29
Coordinating with Part C Community Level
  • Hearing Resource Coordinators attend service
    coordinator training sponsored by the lead Part C
    agency
  • Hearing Resource Coordinators, or their designee,
    attends the initial IFSP
  • Hearing Resource Coordinator sponsors and attends
    meetings with local Part C staff

30
Coordinating with Child Find
  • Regional workshops
  • EHDI statistics
  • What parents want to know
  • Unique elements of assessment (e.g., audiological
    report, modality preferences, functional auditory
    skills)
  • Integrating federal and state initiatives (EHDI,
    Part C, Child Find, State school for the Deaf)
  • Meetings in individual school districts
  • Articles in newsletters
  • Funding is assumed by the parent organization
    (e.g., EHDI funds, State School for the Deaf)

31
Who are the children entering Kdg
  • Early-identified prior to 6 months
  • Early intervention in the first 6 months
  • Language levels similar to children with normal
    hearing with similar cognitive levels on
    average (Yoshinaga-Itano, Coulter Thomson,
    2000, 2001)
  • 75 with intelligible speech (mild through
    severe) and profound with cochlear implants by 5
    years of age (Yoshinaga-Itano Sedey, 2000)
  • Social-emotional skills at age level
    (Yoshinaga-Itano Abdala-Uzcategui, 2000)

32
INFANT/TODDLERS
  • Hard-of-hearing children are more similar to
    children with
  • Moderate to profound hearing loss
  • Than to children with normal hearing
  • In Speech Production (Yoshinaga-Itano Sedey,
    2000)
  • And
  • Language Production (Yoshinaga-Itano et al., 1998)

33
PRESCHOOL-AGED CHILDREN
  • Vocabulary levels are similar to normally hearing
    peers (Garafalo Yoshinaga-Itano, 2005)
  • Spoken English syntax is still delayed, as speech
    production skills are developing (Sedey, 2004)
  • Pragmatic language skills are delayed (Sedey,
    2004)
  • Speech production skills are delayed
  • (Yoshinaga-Itano Sedey, 2000)

34
  • Preschool-aged children with significant hearing
    loss require highly specific and specialized
    instruction specific to hearing loss
  • In order to enter kindergarten with total
    language skills and speech production on par with
    their normally hearing peers

35
Children who do not maintain age-appropriate
communication skills
  • Later-identified children (Yoshinaga-Itano et
    al., 1998 Yoshinaga-Itano, Coulter Thomson,
    2000, 2001)
  • Multiply disabled 40 of population but
    severity and impact on communication varies
    (Yoshinaga-Itano et al., 1998)
  • Children from non-English speaking families
    (Nelson, Cardon Yoshinaga-Itano, 2005)

36
Special populations
  • Children with progressive hearing loss
  • Children with acquired hearing loss
  • Children with unilateral hearing loss
    transitioning to bilateral hearing loss
  • Children with auditory neuropathy/dysynchrony

37
Early-identified/early implanted
  • Children with profound hearing loss
  • Trends for cochlear implantation
  • Early implantation
  • Below 2 years of age (Yoshinaga-Itano, in press)
  • Regardless of method of communication
  • Developing intelligible speech before 5 years of
    age
  • Maintaining age-appropriate language development

38
Children with auditory neuropathy/dysynchrony
  • Approximately 10 of children with bilateral
    hearing loss (Thomson, Portnuff
    Yoshinaga-Itano, 2005)
  • Some children who once had otoacoustic emissions
    but have lost them
  • Frequently poor hearing aid users visual
    learners
  • Some are candidates for cochlear implants

39
Children with unilateral hearing loss
  • Children born with SN unilateral hearing loss who
    have progressed to SN bilateral hearing loss- 25
    of unilateral population
  • Asymmetrical hearing loss
  • Can have unusual configurations rising
    configurations
  • 30 of remaining unilaterals have significant
    language delays
  • Typically have intelligible speech
  • Etiologies unknown in 80 of cases

40
Children from non-English speaking families
  • High proportion of later-identified
  • High proportion of multiply disabled
  • High proportion of auditory neuropathy/dysynchrony
  • High proportion of genetic hearing loss
  • Some cultures have consanguinity issues
  • High proportion of ototoxicity
  • Some cultures dispense ototoxic drugs over the
    counter (i.e. China, Mexico)

41
Children with multiple disabilities
  • Increase in low birth weight premature infants
  • Severe neurological/cognitive deficits
  • Visual disabilities
  • Emotional/behavioral disorders
  • Learning Disabilities
  • Autism/Spectrum Disorder

42
Deaf Education Reform
  • Most children identified within the first few
    months of life
  • More than 15,000 children identified each year
    and in intervention in the first 6 months
  • Great intensity of service required in the first
    five years of life
  • New populations Children with minimal hearing
    loss to profound hearing loss, unilateral and
    bilateral, auditory neuropathy/dysynchrony

43
  • Need for intensive language instruction
  • Need for intensive auditory/speech stimulation
  • Need for Parent education first five years of
    childs life
  • Need for single point of entry into intervention
  • Need to provide similar service to all families
    no matter where they live
  • Need for expert knowledge in hearing loss

44
Need for systems change
  • Parent-infant programs
  • Preschool programs
  • Day schools center-based programs
  • Residential programs
  • THE GOAL FOR ACADEMIC/COMMUNICATION
    EXPECTATIONS
  • COMPARABILITY
  • WITH HEARING PEERS

45
Accountability
  • Assessments
  • Consistency within state for assessment protocols
  • Consistency nationally for assessment protocols
  • Assessments that are necessary for intervention
    planning
  • Goals guided by assessment data

46
Statewide developmental databases
  • What teaching strategies work?
  • Are there some developmental areas that require
    additional in-service training of teachers and
    parent-infant interventionists.
  • What sub-populations require different teaching
    strategies?
  • State statistics- incidence/prevalence
  • Success of EHDI/UNHS programs

47
Single point of entry
  • State Schools for the Deaf
  • State-wide programs
  • Infant programs
  • Colorado enrolls almost 300 children birth
    through 36 months through the Colorado State
    School for the Deaf and Blind

48
  • Preschool-aged services would enroll
    approximately 300 more children
  • Elementary school-aged children in center-based
    programs and residential programs is diminishing
  • Programs for socialization
  • Middle school/High school
  • At-risk prevention for social/emotional issues

49
Residential placement
  • Children requiring individualized and intensive
    educational instruction
  • Multiply disabled
  • Neurological/cognitive disabilities
  • Motor disabilities
  • Autism
  • Social-emotional behavioral disorders

50
Challenge for Deaf Education
  • Flexibility
  • Adaptability
  • Communication success
  • Options
  • Meeting diverse needs
  • Rapid change

51
A is for AccessCheryl DeConde Johnson,
Ed.D.Colorado Department of Educationjohnson_c_at_c
de.state.co.us www.cde.state.co.us
  • Achieving Authentic Accessibility for Students
    who are Deaf and Hard of Hearing

High Standards
Communication- driven
Critical Mass
Full Access
52
What does Communication Access Mean?
  • Able to receive information
  • Having language to identify what is received
  • Interweave of cognition and language to derive
    meaning
  • Able to actively participate in flow of
    conversation e.g., communication ease
  • Communication access occurs when there is shared
    meaning.

53
The Faces of Deaf Education
Modes of Communication listening/speaking
. visual/signing Languages English/Spanish
(spoken)American Sign Language (visual)
54
(No Transcript)
55
Change in Educational Placements-D/HH Students
Ages 6-21Source US Dept of Ed., 24th Annual
Report to Congress, Appendix A, Table AB2, 2002
Year lt21 of time out of regular class 21-60 of time out of regular class gt60 of time out of regular class Separate Facility
1988-89 26.9 21 33.6 18.6
1992-93 29.4 19.7 28.1 22.7
1999-2000 CO 40.3 65.7 19.3 8.4 24.5 14.6 15.8 11.1
56
  • WE CAN MEET THE NEEDS OF THE NEW GENERATION OF
    CHILDREN WHO ARE DEAF OR HARD OF HEARING
  • WILL WE ACCEPT THE CHALLENGE?
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