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					About 
					the APDQ
					
					 
					
					
					Introduction 
					 
					The APDQ is a differential 
					screening tool for children’s listening and learning which 
					looks at the relative strength of a student's auditory 
					processing, attention, and language skills. Authored by Dr. 
					Brian O’Hara, a developmental-behavioral pediatrician in 
					Honolulu, Hawaii, It has a 2016 copyright and is available 
					for online use in 2023. 
						SEPTEMBER 2025 UPDATE 
						The auditory processing website is now 2 years old and 
						has returned over 1500 reports to parents and 
						professionals world-wide, with only 50 % to the USA.  A 
						minor correction has been made to scoring protocols, 
						favoring more reliable "rank percentiles" vs. "raw scale 
						score" subtractions. This has resulted in a very minor 
						1% shift of single risk category assignments toward the 
						"Combined APD and ADHD" designation.    
					Using this questionnaire, 
					parents and/or teachers of 7 to 18 year-olds rate a 
					student’s skills on 50 key items which can be readily 
					observed in daily life.  
					A REPORT is then made outlining 
					the student’s relative risk profile for Hearing-Auditory 
					Processing, Attention and Language-Learning disorders. 
					REPORT findings have been very 
					useful in guiding clinical referrals, with screening 
					accuracy reported in the 70 to 85% range. The questionnaire 
					has been translated into seven foreign languages and 
					recommend as a screening tool for APD by consensus panels 
					from the American Academy of Audiology and the New Zealand 
					Audiological Society.
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 For more information, email us at:
					
					info@auditoryprocessing.org
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