4.3 Article

Do UK audiologists feel able to address the hearing, social and emotional needs of their adult patients with hearing loss

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TAYLOR & FRANCIS LTD
DOI: 10.1080/14992027.2023.2280454

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Counselling; adjustment; confidence; rehabilitation; patient-centred care

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This study aimed to investigate the provision of counselling in adult audiological rehabilitation in the UK. The results showed that audiologists felt more competent in addressing the hearing needs of their patients compared to emotional or social needs. Lack of supervision and training were identified as barriers to providing emotional support. The study suggested that clinical training programs should incorporate more counselling courses to address this gap.
Objective: The aim of this project was to investigate the provision of counselling in adult audiological rehabilitation and to highlight training barriers and needs.Design: A service evaluation in which respondents completed a survey in which they rated their knowledge, confidence and competence in addressing the hearing, social and emotional needs of their patients. They were also asked to define counselling.Sample: 64 UK practising audiologists in adult audiological rehabilitation, aged 20->60 years (84% females, 16% males), with a range of years in clinical practice.Results: Counselling definitions fell into three main categories: the audiologist as the doer, the audiologist as the facilitator, and the audiologist and patient as partners. Respondents reported feeling more able to counsel the hearing related needs of their patients, than emotional or social needs. There were significant positive statistical associations between counselling training completed and self-rated counselling abilities for managing emotional needs. Clinical experience was not associated with self-rated counselling. Lack of supervision and training were identified as some of the main barriers to providing emotional support. Almost all respondents reported a desire for further training in delivering emotional support, with the belief that this would improve services and patient outcomes.Conclusions: UK audiologists demonstrated person-centred thinking through their definitions of counselling. However, they reported significant barriers in being able to support the needs of adults with hearing loss. Training needs around emotional support in audiology counselling are not currently being met. It is important for clinical training programmes to address this gap by incorporating more counselling courses into their curricula.

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