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Does otitis media affect later language ability? A prospective birth cohort study

journal contribution
posted on 2023-05-21, 06:40 authored by Brennan-Jones, CG, Whitehouse, AJO, Samuel CalderSamuel Calder, Costa, CD, Eikelboom, RH, Swanepoel, DW, Jamieson, SE

Purpose The aim of the study was to examine whether otitis media (OM) in early childhood has an impact on language development in later childhood.

Methods We analyzed data from 1,344 second-generation (Generation 2) participants in the Raine Study, a longitudinal pregnancy cohort established in Perth, Western Australia, between 1989 and 1991. OM was assessed clinically at 6 years of age. Language development was measured using the Peabody Picture Vocabulary Test–Revised (PPVT-R) at 6 and 10 years of age and the Clinical Evaluation of Language Fundamentals–Third Edition at 10 years of age. Logistic regression analysis accounted for a wide range of social and environmental covariates.

Results There was no significant relationship between bilateral OM and language ability at 6 years of age (β = −0.56 [−3.78, 2.66], p = .732). However, while scores were within the normal range for the outcome measures at both time points, there was a significant reduction in the rate of receptive vocabulary growth at 10 years of age (PPVT-R) for children with bilateral OM at 6 years of age (β = −3.17 [−6.04, −0.31], p = .030), but not for the combined unilateral or bilateral OM group (β = −1.83 [−4.04, 0.39], p = .106).

Conclusions Children with OM detected at 6 years of age in this cohort had average language development scores within the normal range at 6 and 10 years of age. However, there was a small but statistically significant reduction in the rate of receptive vocabulary growth at 10 years of age (on the PPVT-R measure only) in children who had bilateral OM at 6 years of age after adjusting for a range of sociodemographic factors.

History

Publication title

Journal of Speech, Language, and Hearing Research

Volume

63

Issue

7

Pagination

2441-2452

ISSN

1092-4388

Department/School

School of Health Sciences

Publisher

Amer Speech-Language-Hearing Assoc

Place of publication

10801 Rockville Pike, Rockville, USA, Md, 20852-3279

Rights statement

Copyright © 2020 American Speech-Language-Hearing Association

Repository Status

  • Restricted

Socio-economic Objectives

Diagnosis of human diseases and conditions

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