Challenges

Hearing loss can be frustrating and stressful. It can also have long-term health effects, including a higher risk of dementia.
Research by Frank Lin, M.D., of the Johns Hopkins University School of Medicine and Bloomberg School of Public Health, has shown a direct relationship between the severity of hearing loss and the risk of dementia. He also led research showing that dementia progresses faster in people with hearing loss.
Can treating hearing loss with hearing aids lower the risk or slow the progression of dementia? That crucial question has implications for millions of Americans and their families. About 1 in 3 U.S. adults ages 65 to 74 have hearing loss. Among people older than 75, that number rises to 1 in 2, according to the National Institutes of Health.
Two recent studies suggest hearing aids may make a difference. In the first large-scale, randomized controlled trial on the use of hearing aids and brain function, known as ACHIEVE for Aging and Cognitive Health Evaluation in Elders, Lin and colleagues tracked nearly 1,000 adults ages 70 to 84 with hearing loss. Half the group received hearing aids; the other half received advice on healthy aging. For three years, all participants were tested regularly on their thinking and memory, as reported in 2023 in The Lancet.
A closer look
The results of ACHIEVE appeared to be disappointing at first glance, Lin said in a talk at the NIH in Bethesda, Maryland, in November 2023. In analyzing the data from the group as a whole, researchers found that the use of hearing aids did not slow down cognitive decline during the three-year study.
But breaking down the data told a different story. “We recruited … from two distinct study populations,” Lin said, and the two groups had dramatically different outcomes.
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