Why do some babies need another hearing test?

When a baby's newborn hearing screen is out of the normal range, your baby’s healthcare team or the state screening program will arrange for additional testing. It is important to remember that an out-of-range screening result does not necessarily mean that your child has hearing loss. Babies can fail the newborn hearing screening due to fluid in the ear, movement or crying, or noise in the testing room. However, because some babies do have hearing loss at birth, follow-up testing is the only way to know for sure if your baby does or does not have hearing loss.

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1. What is newborn hearing screening?
2. Why do some babies need another hearing test?
3. Can a newborn pass the hearing test and still have hearing loss?
4. How is a hearing screen different from an audiology evaluation?
5. Can I wait until my baby is older before I schedule follow-up testing with an audiologist?
6. Why do newborns need hearing screening?
7. Why is it important that newborns get screened?
8. How is the screening done?
9. Where can my baby get a hearing screen?
10. How do i know if my baby had a hearing screen?
11. What if I deliver my baby at home?
12. How much does it cost?
13. What if my baby does not pass the screening?
14. If my baby is identified as deaf or hard of hearing, what are the treatment and intervention options?
15. If my baby passes the newborn hearing screening, does it mean they will not have hearing loss later?
16. If my baby passes the first hearing test, why is more screening needed?
17. What is the difference between a hearing screen and a diagnostic evaluation?