Early intervention in speech, language, and hearing disorders is widely recognized as essential for reducing long-term communication challenges, with audiological perspectives providing a foundation for early detection, diagnosis, and management. Drawing on evidence from more than 50 peer-reviewed studies published between 2000 and 2025, this study reviews the effectiveness of newborn hearing screening, amplification technologies, and structured rehabilitation programs. Findings consistently reveal that children identified with hearing loss and treated before 6 months of age achieve age-appropriate speech and language outcomes in 85–90% of cases, whereas delays in intervention until after 2 years reduce success rates to 30–40%. The role of parental involvement is equally significant; when parents engage actively in therapy and daily communication practices, approximately 85% of children demonstrate normal developmental progress, compared to only 39% among those with minimal parental participation. Despite these encouraging outcomes, disparities in access persist, particularly in low- and middle-income countries where fewer than 20% of infants are screened at birth and the cost of cochlear implants often exceeds the average annual household income. These barriers result in delayed diagnosis and limited rehabilitation opportunities. Innovative solutions such as tele-audiology have begun to address these challenges, with pilot projects in Africa remotely screening over 10,000 infants in under 3 years, though further evaluation of sustainability and long-term outcomes is needed. The evidence demonstrates that amplification devices such as hearing aids and cochlear implants provide critical auditory input but cannot independently guarantee success without consistent rehabilitative support and family-centered care. Overall, early audiological interventions are vital for improving language, educational, and social outcomes in children with hearing disorders. However, achieving equitable benefits requires systemic integration of universal newborn hearing screening, financial support for devices, parental training, and culturally appropriate awareness programs, particularly in resource-limited contexts.
Ali et al. (Sun,) studied this question.