WIN or Get Huge Savings!
|
All That Noise Is Damaging Children’s Hearing Source: New York Times by Jane E. Brody Date: 12/12/08
Michael became hooked on headphones in his early teens. He walked the streets of Brooklyn day after day with his favorite music blasting directly into his ears. By his early 20s, the sensory hair cells in his inner ears had been permanently damaged and Michael had lost much of his upper-range hearing.
The
Children’s Hearing Institute reports that hearing loss among children
and young adults is rising in the United States, and that one-third of
the damage is caused by noise.
According
to the American Academy of Audiology, about one child in eight has
noise-induced hearing loss. That means some five million children have
an entirely preventable disability that will stay with them for life.
The
academy has begun a “turn it to the left” (the volume dial, that is)
awareness campaign in hopes of protecting current and future
generations of youngsters from unwittingly damaging their hearing.
Often, the problem is not detected until children develop persistent
ringing in the ears or begin to have learning or behavior problems in
school because of trouble understanding speech.
Although
newborns are now routinely screened for hearing loss, there is no
federal mandate for screening the hearing of school-age children. What
testing is done often fails to check hearing at high enough pitches, a
federal research team pointed out in the journal Pediatrics.
Surrounded by Noise
We
live in a noisy world. Young and old alike are beset by sounds over
which we may have little or no control: power mowers, leaf blowers,
snow blowers, car and house alarms, sirens, motorcycles, Jet Skis,
loudspeakers, even movie previews.
We
attend rock concerts, weddings, parties and sports events at which the
music is so loud you can hardly hear the person sitting next to you. At
home, televisions, stereos and computer games are often turned up so
loud that listeners cannot hear a doorbell or a telephone.
Many
“modern” restaurants have opted for noise enhancement instead of
abatement. And try having a conversation in a school cafeteria at
lunchtime.
Any time you need to shout to be heard by someone near you, your hearing is most likely to be in a decibel danger zone.
As
if environmental noise were not enough, now we besiege children with
noisy toys and personal listening devices that can permanently damage
their hearing. Toys that meet the safety standards of the American
Society for Testing and Materials can produce sound up to 138 decibels,
as loud as a jet taking off. Yet workplace rules require hearing
protection for those exposed to noise above 85 decibels.
A
series of studies conducted in 2002 among 116 infants by researchers at
Johns Hopkins indicated that even moderate background noise can
interfere with how they learn language. The effect on babies’ hearing
in a noisy house is similar to what an older person with age-related
hearing loss may encounter at a crowded cocktail party.
A
landmark study in 1975 found that children in classrooms on the noisy
side of a school had lower reading scores than those whose classes were
on the quiet side.
Noise-induced
hearing loss can come about in two ways: from a brief exposure to a
very loud noise or from consistent exposure to moderate-level noise.
Thus, there is much concern about the lasting effects of MP3 players
that are turned up loud enough to block out surrounding sound, like
street noise. An MP3 player at maximum volume produces about 105
decibels — 100 times as intense as 85 decibels, where hearing damage
begins. (For every 10 decibels, sound intensity increases tenfold.)
The
National Institute for Occupational Safety and Health says 110 decibels
can produce hearing damage after just 1 minute, 29 seconds of exposure.
The League for the Hard of Hearing cautions that “noise levels above 85
decibels will harm hearing over time” and that levels above 140
decibels — the pain threshold — can damage hearing after just one
exposure.
New
bone-conduction headphones that hook over the ears and pass sound
through the skull to the inner ear may not solve the problem. While
they allow listeners to hear an oncoming car or a person speaking,
users may turn up the volume to overcome ambient noise, damaging the
15,000 tiny hair cells in the inner ear that transfer sound energy to
the brain.
Once
damaged, hair cells can neither be repaired nor replaced. The damage
makes it difficult to hear high-pitched sounds, including certain
speech sounds and the voices of women and children. Tinnitus, a
continuous ringing, roaring or clicking in the ears, can also result.
Protecting Young Ears
Before
buying noisemaking toys, parents would do well to listen to how loud
they are. If the item comes with a volume control, monitor its use to
make sure it is kept near the lowest level. Consider returning gifts
that make loud noises, or disable the noise-making function. Or
restrict the use of noisy toys to outside play areas.
Children
who play computer games and stereo equipment should be warned to keep
the volume down. Time spent in video arcades, where the noise level can
exceed 110 decibels, should be strictly limited. Most iPods have a
control that allows parents to set a maximum volume.
Copyright 2007. All Rights Reserved. |
|
FREE Vitamix 5200 Contest!
|