<p>One in four of the world's population will suffer from hearing problems by 2050, the World Health Organization warned Tuesday, calling for extra investment in prevention and treatment.</p>.<p>The first-ever global report on hearing said that the causes of many of the problems -- such as infections, diseases, birth defects, noise exposure and lifestyle choices -- could be prevented.</p>.<p>The report proposed a package of measures, which it calculated would cost $1.33 per person per year.</p>.<p>Against that, it set the figure of nearly a trillion US dollars lost every year because the issue was not being properly addressed.</p>.<p>"Failure to act will be costly in terms of the health and well-being of those affected, and the financial losses arising from their exclusion from communication, education and employment," said the report.</p>.<p>One in five people worldwide have hearing problems currently, it said.</p>.<p>But the report warned: "The number of people with hearing loss may increase more than 1.5-fold during the next three decades" to 2.5 billion people -- up from 1.6 billion in 2019.</p>.<p>Of the 2.5 billion, 700 million would in 2050 have a serious enough condition to require some kind of treatment, it added -- up from 430 million in 2019.</p>.<p>Much of the expected rise is due to demographic and population trends, it added.</p>.<p>A major contributor to hearing problems is a lack of access to care, which is particularly striking in low-income countries where there are far fewer professionals available to treat them.</p>.<p>Since nearly 80 percent of people with hearing loss live in such countries, most are not getting the help they need.</p>.<p>Even in richer countries with better facilities, access to care is often uneven, said the report.</p>.<p>And a lack of accurate information and the stigma surrounding ear disease and hearing loss also prevents people getting the care they need.</p>.<p>"Even among health-care providers, knowledge relevant to prevention, early identification and management of hearing loss and ear diseases is commonly lacking," it noted.</p>.<p>The report proposed a package of measures, including public health initiatives from reducing noise in public spaces to increasing vaccinations for diseases such as meningitis that can cause hearing loss.</p>.<p>It also recommended systematic screening to identify the problem at key points in people's lives.</p>.<p>Among children, it said, hearing loss could be prevented in 60 percent of cases.</p>.<p>"An estimated one trillion US dollars is lost each year due to our collective failure to adequately address hearing loss," WHO director-general Tedros Adhanom Ghebreyesus said in the report.</p>.<p>"While the financial burden is enormous, what cannot be quantified is the distress caused by the loss of communication, education and social interaction that accompanies unaddressed hearing loss."</p>
<p>One in four of the world's population will suffer from hearing problems by 2050, the World Health Organization warned Tuesday, calling for extra investment in prevention and treatment.</p>.<p>The first-ever global report on hearing said that the causes of many of the problems -- such as infections, diseases, birth defects, noise exposure and lifestyle choices -- could be prevented.</p>.<p>The report proposed a package of measures, which it calculated would cost $1.33 per person per year.</p>.<p>Against that, it set the figure of nearly a trillion US dollars lost every year because the issue was not being properly addressed.</p>.<p>"Failure to act will be costly in terms of the health and well-being of those affected, and the financial losses arising from their exclusion from communication, education and employment," said the report.</p>.<p>One in five people worldwide have hearing problems currently, it said.</p>.<p>But the report warned: "The number of people with hearing loss may increase more than 1.5-fold during the next three decades" to 2.5 billion people -- up from 1.6 billion in 2019.</p>.<p>Of the 2.5 billion, 700 million would in 2050 have a serious enough condition to require some kind of treatment, it added -- up from 430 million in 2019.</p>.<p>Much of the expected rise is due to demographic and population trends, it added.</p>.<p>A major contributor to hearing problems is a lack of access to care, which is particularly striking in low-income countries where there are far fewer professionals available to treat them.</p>.<p>Since nearly 80 percent of people with hearing loss live in such countries, most are not getting the help they need.</p>.<p>Even in richer countries with better facilities, access to care is often uneven, said the report.</p>.<p>And a lack of accurate information and the stigma surrounding ear disease and hearing loss also prevents people getting the care they need.</p>.<p>"Even among health-care providers, knowledge relevant to prevention, early identification and management of hearing loss and ear diseases is commonly lacking," it noted.</p>.<p>The report proposed a package of measures, including public health initiatives from reducing noise in public spaces to increasing vaccinations for diseases such as meningitis that can cause hearing loss.</p>.<p>It also recommended systematic screening to identify the problem at key points in people's lives.</p>.<p>Among children, it said, hearing loss could be prevented in 60 percent of cases.</p>.<p>"An estimated one trillion US dollars is lost each year due to our collective failure to adequately address hearing loss," WHO director-general Tedros Adhanom Ghebreyesus said in the report.</p>.<p>"While the financial burden is enormous, what cannot be quantified is the distress caused by the loss of communication, education and social interaction that accompanies unaddressed hearing loss."</p>