Sarah Chapman: Top 10 priorities for research on mild-moderate hearing loss

Posted on September 16, 2015 by



Top 10 lists are everywhere, aren’t they? Today I even came across a list of ‘top 10 ways for making a great list’.

But I have a top 10 list that is pretty special. It’s the culmination of a project in which people mild-moderate hearing loss, their families and friends, clinicians in the field and their representative bodies, came together to identify and prioritize uncertainties for research.

I was delighted to be part of this process, which unfolded over the past year, representing Cochrane UK on the steering group but also bringing to it my own experience of living with moderate hearing loss.

How to find out what matters most

Finding out what matters most to people affected by a condition and making that knowledge available to guide future researchers is what James Lind Alliance Priority Setting Partnerships (PSPs), like this one, are all about. I wrote about the early stages of this one here, earlier this year.

So what happened next and how did we get to the top 10?

Survey 1: opening the floodgates!

This was shared as widely as possible and asked people to submit their questions about the prevention, diagnosis and treatment of mild-moderate hearing loss. 461 people sent 1,147 suggestions!

The researchers at the NIHR Nottingham Hearing Biomedical Research Unit (NHBRU) grouped and tidied these into indicative research questions and identified which were true uncertainties by checking them against existing research. 87 questions went on to the next phase.

Survey 2: narrowing it down

This asked people to rank these 87 questions on a scale from ‘not a priority’ to ‘very high priority’. The top ranked 30 were then thrashed out at a workshop, earlier this month, where patients, family and friends, and clinicians agreed upon the top 10.

Finding the top 10: how we thrashed it out

final priority setting workshop

This was a fascinating process. I rather enjoyed the combination of high tech, like the fancy gadgets two of us were using to assist our hearing aids, and low tech, the laminated cards displaying the 30 questions which we laid out on the floor and moved around as our discussions progressed, to discuss future tech!

The question ‘can new technologies replace hearing aids?’ generated some particularly interesting discussion and it was a good example of the usefulness of pooling the knowledge and experience of those with hearing loss and professionals in the field.

Tracey, one of the workshop participants who has hearing loss, reflected on her experience of the day and the importance of this inclusive approach to establishing research priorities:

“Too often, research is driven by academics and policy makers with little recourse to those whose lives are affected. As a result, patients can sometimes be simply reduced to ‘objects and subjects’ to be tested, examined and questioned rather than being consulted and engaged as equal partners. It was refreshing to be part of something that engaged everyone as experts in the subject, particularly the expert patients and relatives.”

Helen Henshaw, the PSP Co-ordinator and a Senior Research Fellow at the NHBRU, agreed:

“The James Lind Alliance method has enabled us to reach the top 10 research priorities through an inclusive process that ensures that the research agenda is shaped by those individuals who know the most about mild to moderate hearing loss and that the limited funding available for hearing research may be put to best use.”

This is what we chose as the top 10.

Top 10 research priorities

  1. What adverse effects are associated with not treating mild to moderate hearing loss in adults?
  2. Does the early fitting of hearing aid(s) result in increased patient benefit and/or improved cost-effectiveness of the service?
  3. Does the early fitting of hearing aids slow the rate of cognitive decline?
  4. What are the reasons for low hearing aid uptake, use and adherence?
  5. Can new technologies replace hearing aids?
  6. Can stem cell therapy offer a cure for mild to moderate hearing loss in adults?
  7. Does early identification, diagnosis and treatment of mild to moderate hearing loss prevent further deterioration of hearing?
  8. Could new developments to digital hearing aids offer improved speech perception in noisy environments?
  9. How realistic are hearing tests for assessing the everyday hearing abilities of adults with mild to moderate hearing loss?
  10. Could the use of real-world sounds to help program hearing aids in clinic (rather than tones or beeps) improve hearing aid effectiveness?

I’m sure I wasn’t alone in feeling the weight of responsibility for getting this list ‘right’ and in our discussions we also paid close attention to the ‘near misses’, which ended up as questions 11 to 15.

The diversity of the questions felt challenging. David Crowe, JLA Co-ordinator, reassured us. “The final top 10 reflect a good balance of prevention, diagnosis and management questions, and will be disseminated as widely as possible to influence future research decisions”. It was also good to hear that whilst the top ten are the showpiece of this project, the other true uncertainties we identified will also be made available to researchers and funders.

What happens next?

The top 10 are being sent to commissioners, funders and policy makers and the long list of 87 questions will be added to the UK Database of Uncertainties about the Effects of Treatment (UK DUETs). Longer term, Helen and colleagues at the  NHBRU will aim to develop a programme of research that addresses some of the top 10 uncertainties. They might also revisit the suggestions that didn’t make it into the prioritization pool.

All of us felt we had been part of something valuable and I was delighted to have experienced the JLA process of priority setting, many years after I first heard about it. Richard Morely, Co-ordinator of the Cochrane Consumer Network and a JLA Advisor, who was also at the workshop, summed it up:

“The questions and the discussion in groups come from people working at the sharp end of medicine and directly from patients or people with experience of the condition. They capture something fundamentally important, and when partnerships take the questions forward in discussion with funders that is the crucial and unique element of the JLA process.”

Our top 10 joins the lists generated by other PSPs, addressing a variety of conditions from asthma to stillbirth. You can find out more about those here.

Top 10 priorities for research on mild-moderate hearing loss by Sarah Chapman is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-NoDerivatives 4.0 International License.

Sarah’s work as a Knowledge Broker at the UKCC focuses on disseminating Cochrane evidence through social media, including Evidently Cochrane blogs and @ukcochranecentr on Twitter. She has a keen interest in exploring ways to share health evidence widely and encourage engagement with it, and in ensuring that research is shaped by the questions patients want answered. Before joining the UKCC in 2007, Sarah worked for a number of UK-based institutions, including the University of Oxford and the Royal College of Nursing Institute, conducting systematic reviews in many areas of health. She is also a qualified nurse and has a degree in History from the University of Oxford and in the history of women’s health and illness in early modern England (MPhil., University of Reading).

The Limping Chicken is the UK’s deaf blogs and news website, and is the world’s most popular deaf blog. 

Find out how to write for us by clicking here, or sign a blog for us by clicking here!

Make sure you never miss a post by finding out how to follow us, and don’t forget to check out what our supporters provide: 


Enjoying our eggs? Support The Limping Chicken:



The Limping Chicken is the world's most popular Deaf blog, and is edited by Deaf  journalist,  screenwriter and director Charlie Swinbourne.

Our posts represent the opinions of blog authors, they do not represent the site's views or those of the site's editor. Posting a blog does not imply agreement with a blog's content. Read our disclaimer here and read our privacy policy here.

Find out how to write for us by clicking here, and how to follow us by clicking here.

The site exists thanks to our supporters. Check them out below:

Posted in: sarah chapman