We are serious about protecting your online privacy. It is very important to us to be clear about what data we collect, why we collect it and how we use it. This privacy policy explains our views and practices concerning privacy, and how they may apply to you as a user of our website.
When we talk about ‘us’, we mean the operator of www.adulthearing.com (‘website’). When we talk about ‘you’, we mean you as a participant or user of this website or services of this website. Our contact details are in the schedule at the end of this policy.
‘Personal data’ or ‘personal information’ is information that directly identifies you, such as your name and email address, or data that could be used, on its own or in combination with other data, to identify you.
We aim for compliance with Australian Privacy Law and the General Data Protection Regulations (GDPR).
You can browse our website anonymously, although cookies may be collected. You will not be able to access our services anonymously. Once you access our services, including for example by joining our mailing list or requesting to contribute to our website, we will begin collecting your personal information in accordance with this policy.
We collect personal data about you when you give it to us for an agreed purpose. This generally occurs when you complete an online submission form, register to be able to make comments on our website, request information (for example download a resource) or when you subscribe to our mailing list. We may use this information to contact you about the service and related services you have inquired about, to keep you up-to-date with our activities or to save your login information for the next time you comment on our website.
Other than as disclosed in this privacy policy, we never sell, rent or otherwise disclose your personal information to third parties including advertisers or strategic partners.
We collect and process the minimum amount of information required to deliver our requested services to you. We process this information to fulfill your request. This information includes:
This is the type of information typically found on a business card. If you make a submission, we will also store your IP address. We process this information for our legitimate business purpose of matching your IP address with your user information. Unless stated otherwise in this policy, personal information will be held for our business purposes for a period of up to 7 years (unless you subscribe to our services for a longer period). After that time, we may still retain your personal information however if we do so, it will be in a form where personal details are de-identified. This means you will not be able to be identified once the data is made anonymous.
With your permission, we may use your email address to send you emails about our activities. These emails may contain links to other user content, blog posts, YouTube videos, reports/whitepapers etc. We process this information based on your consent. You may always withdraw your consent and unsubscribe to these emails by clicking on the unsubscribe link at the bottom of the email or by contacting us using the information in the schedule at the end of this policy.
If you interact with us via our blog or on social networking sites (eg. Facebook, Twitter. Google+, Linkedin, Instagram), we may receive information about you. We may process this data as a legitimate business interest to properly administer our business and website and communications with users. You should be aware that personal information you disclose on those social media sites is publicly available.
We may also receive information from third party sites Vimeo and WordPress.
If you are a sponsor/supporter of our site you consent to our use of your business name/logo/name (as applicable) to be displayed on our website, publications or marketing material as a sponsor.
Articles on our website may contain embedded content from other websites. For example, videos or images within an article or even whole articles. The embedded data behaves as though you have actually visited the other website. These websites may collect data about you, use cookies, embed additional third-party tracking and monitor your interaction with the embedded content, including tracking your interaction with the embedded content if you have an account or are logged in to the other website.
If you provide us with a testimonial, submission, video or interview (‘user submission’), you give us your consent to use the following content on our website, in our public presentations, in collated papers or reports or in marketing material:
You also give us permission to store this information in our secure records together with your email address and the date which you provided your user submission. We will retain and use this information for it’s intended purpose for a period of up to 7 years. We process this information based on your consent.
If our website is acquired by or merged with another company or business, your personal data may be transferred to the new owners so they may continue to support and sell the products and services of the website. Provided the new owners have a privacy policy that is compliant with current laws, by agreeing to this privacy policy, you agree to such a transfer.
We also may share your personal information when required to do so by law or with our professional advisers to obtain advice, for instance if there is a breach of the terms and conditions, or to meet our accounting or compliance obligations.
We use a range of tools provided by third parties including search engine browsers and our web hosting company, to collect or view social media, app or website traffic information and to enable our website to function smoothly. For example, we use a log-in cookie so users do not have to enter their username and password each time they wish to leave a comment.
We may use tracking pixels (for example Google Analytics) to aid in measuring and tracking where our website traffic is coming from and to track the performance of our site. We may also use these technical and functional cookies to do tasks such as to identify you when you visit our site, manage your log in, remember your preferences, for security purposes, for analysis and to generally improve your experience and manage your sessions on our website.
We may use remarking pixels (for example from Facebook and Google) to aid in customised, targeted follow up advertising. These sites have their own privacy policies.
Most web browsers automatically accept cookies, but you can usually modify your browser setting to decline cookies if you prefer. Some website features may not function properly without cookies.
The information collected by these tools may include the IP address of the device you are using and information about sites that IP address has come from, the pages accessed on our site and the next site visited. We use the information, as a legitimate business interest, to help to track your use of our online services to improve your user experience and the quality of our services.
To find out how to opt out of tailored advertising please check the options available here – http://www.networkadvertising.org/choices/.
You can find out more about our specific cookie usage in our cookie policy here https://adulthearing.com/cookie-policy/.
Our website is hosted using cloud hosting provided by Host Hero- http://hosthero.com.au/ who apply appropriate security protocols. Host Hero’s data privacy can be found here: https://www.hosthero.com.au/terms-of-service/
Our CRM is hosted and managed by HubSpot and your personal information is stored through HubSpot’s data storage, databases and the general platform. They store your data on a secure server behind a firewall. HubSpot’s data privacy policy can be found here: https://legal.hubspot.com/privacy-policy.
Depending on your location, your personal information may cross Country boarders and may be stored in a jurisdiction with different privacy laws to where you live. By agreeing to this policy, you agree to such a transfer.
We are committed to ensuring your information is secure. To prevent unauthorised access or disclosure, we use third party hosting and storage providers with industry standard security. We also have SSL certifications for our website with regular backups of the WordPress site and plug-ins to avoid misuse, interference loss or unauthorised access, modification or disclosure of your personal information.
DISCLAIMER: While we do our best to ensure the security of your data, no storage is 100% secure and we cannot guarantee the security of our website, our records, your data or your content. If you feel this is not sufficient, please do not provide us with your personal information, or, if you have already provided personal information, please contact us and we will securely destroy it.
If the security on our website is breached, we will contact you within 24 hours of becoming aware of the breach and will prompt you to change your login details (this only applies to users who have registered an on-line account with us and have up to date contact details).
Our website is not intended to be used by minors nor do we do not intend to collect the personal data of persons under the age of 13. If you are the guardian of a minor and suspect they may have provided us with their personal information, please contact us and request to have the minor’s personal information destroyed (use the contact information in the schedule below).
You have the right to ensure:
To ensure this happens, you can:
To achieve this, at your request, and upon production of satisfactory identification, we will tell you what personal data about you is being processed (eg what information we have stored), on what basis, and by whom.
You may amend inaccurate, incomplete or outdated personal data at any time by applying directly to us using the contact information in the schedule below.
If you decide your data should not be processed for one or more purposes, you may withdraw your consent from using your data in that way. Please note that we will action your request as soon as practically possible however such a request will not take effect immediately and your data may still be used in the meantime.
You may request that all personal data we have collected about you be deleted from our records and erased from information stored by any third party organisations processing data on our behalf.
If data we have collected about you is processed using automated means, you have the right to receive that data in a structured, machine-readable format and to transmit it to another data controller without hindrance.
If you make a request to be forgotten:
Please let us know if you have any requests, feedback or concerns regarding the way we manage your personal data. Use the contact details listed in the below schedule. We will usually respond to you within 30 days and take action, within reason, as quickly as possible.
If you are not happy with how we manage your concerns, you can contact your local data protection supervisory office. For example, in Australia this would be the Office of the Australian Information Commissioner of the https://www.oaic.gov.au/.
It is important to us that our privacy policy is regularly reviewed and we will do so to keep it relevant and up to date with changing laws. We will notify you of any changes by posting the new policy on this page. You can find the version number and ‘last updated’ date at the top of this policy.
| Where used in this privacy policy, we and us means | The operator of www.adulthearing.com |
| Our contact details | If you have questions, require more information, have a complaint to register or details to amend, correct or delete in relation to your personal information, please contact our privacy compliance officer via email at: Email: info@adulthearing.com |
End.
Shukla A, et al. 2020, Otolaryngology–head and neck surgery; 162(5):622-33.
Methodology
Systematic literature review to summarize the current state of the literature exploring the association between hearing loss and social isolation and/or loneliness.
Findings and Recommendations
Bott A, et al. 2021, International Journal of Audiology; 60:30-46.
Methodology
Scoping review to map and evaluate the extent, range, and nature of research examining the relationship between hearing loss, social isolation, and loneliness in adults across the lifespan
Findings and recommendations
Golub, J. S. et.al.(2019). Association of Audiometric Age-Related Hearing Loss With Depressive Symptoms Among Hispanic Individuals. JAMA otolaryngology– head & neck surgery, 145(2), 132–139
Methodology
Cross-sectional study on 5,328 Hispanic adults to investigate whether objectively measured age-related hearing loss (HL) is associated with clinically significant depressive symptoms
Findings and recommendations
Nachtegaal J, Smit JH, Smits C, et al. The association between hearing status and psychosocial health before the age of 70 years: results from an internet-based national survey on hearing. Ear Hear. 2009;30(3):302-312.
Methodology
Cross sectional cohort study of 1,511 patients
Findings and recommendations
Greenberg PE, et al. Pharmacoeconomics. 2021;39(6):653-665
Methodology
Combined original analyses and literature based estimates based on the national suvey of drug use and the Optum health administrative claim database to update costs of Major Depressive Disorder (MDD) for adults in USA for 2018
Findings and recommendations
Bigelow RT, et al. JAMA Netw Open. 2020;3(7)e2010986.
Methodology
Cross sectional study on adults in USA using data from 2017 National Health Interview Survey, 25 665 adults included in analysis to investigate the association between HL, psychological distress, and mental health care utilization among adults in the United States.
Findings and recommendations
Huber M, et al. Ear Hear. 2025; Published online September 15, 2025.
Methodology
Cohort study in two tertiary research centers of 61 adult patients indicated for CI in Austria and Germany to investigate whether an improvement in hearing after cochlear implantation (CI) was associated with changes in depression and cognitive performance
Findings and recommendations
McIlhiney P, et al. Clin Otolaryngol. 2025;50(5):848-855.
Methodology
Controlled, observational study of 87 adults in three groups, 44 normal hearing, 26 fitted with CI and 17 with untreated hearing loss in Australia to examine how cochlear implantation affects depression, anxiety and stress levels.
Findings and recommendations
Gerst-Emerson K, et al. Loneliness as a public health issue: the impact of loneliness on health care utilization among older adults. Am J Public Health. 2015;105(5):1013–1019.
Methodology
Health and Retirement Study (HRS) of 3,530 US community-dwelling adults aged 60+ to examine whether loneliness is associated with increased health care utilization
Findings and recommendations
Sterling MR, Lin FR, Jannat-Khah DP, Goman AM, Echeverria SE, Safford MM. Hearing loss among older adults with heart failure in the United States: data from the National Health and Nutrition Examination Survey. JAMA Otolaryngol Head Neck Surg. 2018;144(3):273–275
Methodology
Cross sectional analysis on US adults over 70
Findings and recommendations
Hull RH, Kerschen SR. The influence of cardiovascular health on peripheral and central auditory function in adults: a research review. American Journal of Audiology. 2010 Jun;19(1):9-16
Methodology
Comparative research review
Findings and recommendations
Papadopoulou AM, Papouliakos S, Karkos P, Chaidas K. The impact of cardiovascular risk factors on the incidence, severity, and prognosis of sudden sensorineural hearing loss (SSHL): a systematic review. Cureus. 2024;16(4):e58377
Methodology
Systematic literature review of 24 studies with 61,060 patients
Findings and recommendations
Wang C, Xu F, Chen M, Chen X, Li C, Sun X, Zhang Y, et al. Association of obstructive sleep apnea-hypopnea syndrome with hearing loss: a systematic review and meta-analysis. Front Neurol. 2022;13:1017982
Methodology
Systematic review and meta-analysis of 10 studies with 7,867 participants
Findings and recommendations
Jo YS, Lee JM. Assessing the impact of apnea duration on the relationship between obstructive sleep apnea and hearing loss. PLoS One. 2024;19(12):e0315580
Methodology
Retrospective chart review of 90 patients
Findings and recommendations
Kayabasi, S., Hizli, O. & Yildirim, G. The association between obstructive sleep apnea and hearing loss: a cross-sectional analysis. Eur Arch Otorhinolaryngol 276, 2215–2221 (2019)
Methodology
Systematic review and meta-analysis of 12 studies with 9,079 participants
Findings and recommendations
Gopinath B, Flood VM, Teber E, McMahon CM, Mitchell P. Dietary intake of cholesterol is positively associated, and use of cholesterol-lowering medication is negatively associated with prevalent age-related hearing loss. J Nutr. 2011;141(7):1355–1361
Methodology
Population based cohort study of 2,447 adults
Findings and recommendations
Silky S, Singh V, Gupta DK, Chaudhary AK, Yadav R, Kumar R, Siva S, Jain RK. A study of relationship between serum lipids and sensorineural hearing loss. Indian J Otolaryngol Head Neck Surg. 2023;75(Suppl 2):S578–S583.
Methodology
Cross sectional observational study of 150 patients aged 15-60 with hearing loss
Findings and recommendations
Yu Y, Yang ZC, Wang LX. Triglyceride to high-density lipoprotein cholesterol ratio and sensorineural hearing loss in community-dwelling adults: an NHANES analysis. Yonsei Med J. 2024;65(12):741–751.
Methodology
Cross sectional analysis of 1,148 US aduts
Findings and recommendations
Ramatsoma H, Patrick SM. Hypertension associated with hearing loss and tinnitus among hypertensive adults at a tertiary hospital in South Africa. Front Neurol. 2022;13:857600
Methodology
Quantitative cross-sectional study of 106 hypertensive adults and 92 age matched controls
Findings and recommendations
Toyama K, Mogi M. Hypertension and the development of hearing loss. Hypertens Res. 2022;45:172–174
Methodology
Commentary to study by Miyata et al.
Findings and recommendations
Hou Y, Liu B. Relationship Between Hypertension and Hearing Loss: Analysis of the Related Factors. Clin Interv Aging. 2024;19:845–856.
Methodology
Observational study of 517 adult patients with and without hypertension
Findings and recommendations
Agmon M, Lavie L, Doumas M. The Association between Hearing Loss, Postural Control, and Mobility in Older Adults: A Systematic Review. Journal of the American Academy of Audiology. 2017;28(6):575-88.
Methodology
Systematic literature review to systematically review the evidence on the relationship between hearing loss (HL) and postural control/mobility in older adults
Findings and recommendations
Foster JL et al., Trends Hear. 2022;26:23312165221144155.
Methodology
Systematic review and meta-analysis on adults aged ≥60 years with hearing loss and objective measures of postural stability or gait. 27,847 across 25 studies in multiple countries
Findings and recommendations
Haddad YK, et al., Inj Prev. 2024; 30(4):272-276.
Methodology
Observational study using estimated health expenditures on 9,199 patients in USA
Findings and recommendations
Goman AM et al., Lancet Public Health. 2025;10(6):e492-e502
Methodology
Secondary analysis of the ACHIEVE randomized controlled trial on 977 adults aged 70-84 in USA
Findings and recommendations
Louza J, et al. Audiol Neurotol. 2019;24(5):245-252
Methodology
Prospective clinical trial on 33 adults in Germany with CI assessing postural control.
Findings and recommendations
Lin FR, Metter EJ, O’Brien RJ, Resnick SM, Zonderman AB, Ferrucci L. Hearing loss and incident dementia. Arch Neurol. 2011;68(2):214-220. doi:10.1001/archneurol.2010.362
Methodology
Prospective cohort study of 639 dementia-free US participants aged 36–90 to investigate whether hearing loss is prospectively associated with the development of all-cause dementia and Alzheimer’s disease (AD) in older adults.
Findings and recommendations
Yu RC, Proctor D, Soni J, et al. Adult-onset hearing loss and incident cognitive impairment and dementia – A systematic review and meta-analysis of cohort studies. Ageing Res Rev. 2024;98:102346
Methodology
Systematic review and meta-analysis to comprehensively evaluate whether adult-onset hearing loss is associated with increased risk of cognitive impairment and dementia
Findings and recommendations
Livingston G, Huntley J, Liu KY, et al. Dementia prevention, intervention, and care: 2024 report of the Lancet standing Commission. Lancet. 2024;404(10452):572-628.
Methodology
Synthesize findings from systematic reviews, meta-analyses, cohort studies, and RCT’s to update the 2020 report with new evidence on dementia prevention
Findings and recommendations
Wimo A, Seeher K, Cataldi R, et al. The worldwide costs of dementia in 2019. Alzheimers Dement. 2023;19(7):2865-2873. doi:10.1002/alz.12901
Methodology
Leverage prevalence data from IHME and UN population datasets to estimate the global societal costs of dementia in 2019
Findings and recommendations
Mukadam N, Anderson R, Knapp M, et al. Effective interventions for potentially modifiable risk factors for late-onset dementia: a costs and cost-effectiveness modelling study. Lancet Healthy Longev. 2020;1(1):e13-e20.
Methodology
Cost modelling study to evaluate the cost-effectiveness of interventions targeting nine modifiable risk factors for late-onset dementia
Findings and recommendations
Seo HW, Ryu S, Han SY, Lee SH, Chung JH. Cochlear Implantation Is Associated With Reduced Incidence of Dementia in Severe Hearing Loss. Ear Hear. 2025;46(5):1189-1196.
Methodology
Observational population study on 52,219 South Korean adults with severe hearing loss and 1,280,788 individuals with normal hearing to investigate whether auditory rehabilitation—specifically cochlear implants (CI) and hearing aids (HA)—reduces the long-term risk of dementia
Findings and recommendations
Huddle, M. G., Goman, A. M., Kernizan, F. C., Foley, D. M., Price, C., Frick, K. D., & Lin, F. R. (2017). The Economic Impact of Adult Hearing Loss: A Systematic Review. JAMA Otolaryngology–Head & Neck Surgery, 143(10), 1040–1048
Methodology
Systematic literature review to systematically review and summarize existing data on the direct and indirect economic costs associated with adult hearing impairment
Findings and recommendations
Mohr, P. E., Feldman, J. J., Dunbar, J. L., McConkey-Robbins, A., Niparko, J. K., Rittenhouse, R. K., & Skinner, M. W. (2000). The Societal Costs of Severe to Profound Hearing Loss in the United States. International Journal of Technology Assessment in Health Care, 16(4), 1120–1135.
Methods
Incidence-based cohort-survival model using a Markov process to provide a comprehensive, national estimate of the lifetime economic burden of severe to profound hearing impairment (HI) in the U.S
Findings and recommendations
Shukla A, et al. 2020, Otolaryngology–head and neck surgery; 162(5):622-33.
Methodology
Systematic literature review to summarize the current state of the literature exploring the association between hearing loss and social isolation and/or loneliness.
Findings and Recommendations
Bott A, et al. 2021, International Journal of Audiology; 60:30-46.
Methodology
Scoping review to map and evaluate the extent, range, and nature of research examining the relationship between hearing loss, social isolation, and loneliness in adults across the lifespan.
Findings and recommendations
Golub, J. S. et.al.(2019). Association of Audiometric Age-Related Hearing Loss With Depressive Symptoms Among Hispanic Individuals. JAMA otolaryngology– head & neck surgery, 145(2), 132–139
Methodology
Cross-sectional study on 5,328 Hispanic adults to investigate whether objectively measured age-related hearing loss (HL) is associated with clinically significant social isolation symptoms in older Hispanic adults.
Findings and recommendations
Nachtegaal J, Smit JH, Smits C, et al. The association between hearing status and psychosocial health before the age of 70 years: results from an internet-based national survey on hearing. Ear Hear. 2009;30(3):302-312.
Methodology
Cross-sectional study on 925 working Dutch adults to investigate the relationship between hearing status and need for recovery after work and whether psychosocial work characteristics (job demands and job control) influence this relationship.
Findings and recommendations
Ray J, et al. Association of cognition and age-related hearing impairment in the English Longitudinal Study of Ageing. JAMA Otolaryngol Head Neck Surg. 2018;144(10): 876–882.
Methodology
Cross-sectional analysis on 7,385 English adults to examine the link between age-related hearing impairment (ARHI) and cognitive decline in older adults in the UK
Findings and recommendations
Gerst-Emerson K, et al. Loneliness as a public health issue: the impact of loneliness on health care utilization among older adults. Am J Public Health. 2015;105(5):1013–1019.
Methodology
Health and Retirement Study (HRS) of 3,530 US community-dwelling adults aged 60+ to examine whether loneliness is associated with increased health care utilization
Findings and recommendations
Flowers L, Shaw J, Farid M. Medicare spends more on socially isolated older adults. Insight on the Issues. Nov 2017.
Methodology
Health and Retirement Study (HRS) of 5,270 US community-dwelling adults aged 65+ to investigate whether social isolation among older adults is associated with increased Medicare spending.
Findings and recommendations
Hori K, Shah R, Paladugu A, et al. Social Outcomes Among Adults With Hearing Aids and Cochlear Implants: A Systematic Review and Meta-Analysis. JAMA Otolaryngol Head Neck Surg. 2025;151(8):806-816. doi:10.1001/jamaoto.2025.1777
Methodology
Systematic literature review and meta-analysis to evaluate the impact of hearing rehabilitation devices
Findings and recommendations
Bainbridge KE, Cowie CC, Gonzalez F 2nd, Hoffman HJ, Dinces E, Stamler J, Cruickshanks KJ. Risk factors for hearing impairment among adults with diabetes: The Hispanic Community Health Study/Study of Latinos (HCHS/SOL). J Clin Transl Endocrinol. 2016;6:15–22.
Methodology
Cross-sectional analysis of 3,384 adults with diabetes
Findings and recommendations
Caballero-Borrego M, Andujar-Lara I. Type 2 diabetes mellitus and hearing loss: A PRISMA systematic review and meta-analysis. Otolaryngol Head Neck Surg. 2025;173(5):1041–1053
Methodology
Systematic review and meta-analysis of 17 papers
Findings and recommendations
Deng Y, Chen S, Hu J. Diabetes mellitus and hearing loss. Mol Med. 2023;29(1):141.
Methodology
Narrative review
Findings and recommendations
Villarroel, M. A. B. D., Blackwell, D. L., & Jen, A. (2019). Tables of summary health statistics for U.S. adults: 2018 National Health Interview Survey. National Center for Health Statistics
Methodology:
Health statistics from US
Findings and Recommendations
Simpson AN, Matthews LJ, Cassarly C, Dubno JR. Time From Hearing Aid Candidacy to Hearing Aid Adoption: A Longitudinal Cohort Study. Ear Hear. 2019 May/Jun;40(3):468-476.
Objective:
Assess time from hearing aid candidacy to adoption
Methodology:
Longitudinal study of 1.530 adults in US
Findings and Recommendations
ASHA audiology information series, comorbidities and hearing loss. ASHA 2021.
Objective:
Summarise risk factors and health impact from hearing loss
Methodology:
Informational review
Findings and Recommendations
Reed NS, Altan A, Deal JA, et al. Trends in Health Care Costs and Utilization Associated With Untreated Hearing Loss Over 10 Years. JAMA Otolaryngol Head Neck Surg. 2019;145(1):27–34.
Objective:
Evaluate if untreated hearing loss associated with higher health care costs and utilization
Methodology:
Retrospective study of insurance database of 154.414 subjects
Findings and Recommendations
Rein DB et al. The prevalence of bilateral hearing loss in the United States in 2019: a small area estimation modelling approach for obtaining national, state, and county level estimates by demographic subgroup. The Lancet regional health, v30, 2024.
Objective:
Re-estimate rates of bilateral hearing loss Nationally, and create new estimates of hearing loss prevalence at the U.S. State and County levels
Methodology:
Small Area Estimation Modelling
Findings and Recommendations