The National Institute for Health and Care Excellence guidance for the provision of cochlear implants (NICE, 2009) are used to develop candidacy criteria by public health funding bodies within the UK. Often the guidance is interpreted as strict ‘criteria’ whereby clinicians adhere to specific audiometric thresholds without accounting for the acceptable range of performance on individual tests or a child’s functional development. In this paper four clinical paediatric case studies are described from two cochlear implant centres which serve to illustrate difficulties in applying NICE guidance as strict criteria. These are presented in the context of recommending more flexible interpretation based on the content of the current guidance along with considerations of circumstances where NICE guidance might be adapted to optimise use of cochlear implant technology within a national framework.
CITATION STYLE
Hanvey, K., Ambler, M., Maggs, J., & Wilson, K. (2016). Criteria versus guidelines: Are we doing the best for our paediatric patients? Cochlear Implants International, 17, 78–82. https://doi.org/10.1080/14670100.2016.1157310
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