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Often with children aural rehabilitation services would more appropriately be called "habilitative" rather than "rehabilitative". "Rehabilitation" focuses on restoring a skill that is lost. In children, a skill may not be there in the first place, so it has to be taught -- hence the services would be "habilitative," not "rehabilitative." Specific services for children depend on individual needs as dictated by the current age of the child; the age of onset of the hearing loss; the age at which the hearing loss was discovered; the severity of the hearing loss; the type of hearing loss; the extent of hearing loss; and the age at which amplification was introduced. The aural rehabilitation plan is also influenced by the communication mode the child is using. Examples of communication modes are speaking/listening/looking; cued speech, manually coded English, total communication, auditory-oral; auditory-verbal, and American Sign Language. The most debilitating consequence of onset of hearing loss in childhood is its disruption to learning speech and language. The combination of early detection of hearing loss and early use of amplification has been shown to have a dramatically positive effect on the language acquisition abilities of a child with hearing loss. In fact, infants identified with a hearing loss by 6 months can be expected to attain language development on a par with hearing peers. Aural habilitation/rehabilitation services for children typically involve:
Services for children occur in the contexts of early Intervention (ages birth-3) and school services (ages 3-21) through IDEA (Individuals with Disabilities Education Act). In early intervention, an Individualized Family Service Plan (IFSP) is developed and may include audiology services, speech-language pathology services, the services of teachers of the deaf and hard-of-hearing, and the services of other professionals as needed. When the child turns 3, an Individualized Education Program (IEP) is developed. The services provided are designed to maximize the child's success in the general education environment. Again, the IEP may specify audiology services, speech-language pathology services, and the services of teachers of the deaf and hard-of-hearing. Each professional has a role to play in the child' s educational achievement and success. |