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Dangerous Decibels CHICAGO - Researchers fear the growing popularity of
portable music players and other items that attach directly to the ears
- including cell phones - is contributing to hearing loss in younger people.
"It's a different level of use than we've seen
in the past," says Robert Novak, director of clinical education
in audiology at Purdue University in Indiana. "It's becoming more
of a full-day listening experience, as opposed to just when you're jogging." Increasingly, Novak says he's seeing too many young
people with "older ears on younger bodies" - a trend
that's been building since the portable Walkman made its debut a few decades
back. Everywhere she turns, Angella Day sees people carrying
portable music players, often with the ear buds stuffed firmly in place.
"They're very widespread," says Day, a senior at Chicago's
DePaul University who regularly listens to music on her own iPod while
studying or working out. "So addicting." To document the trend, Novak and colleagues have been
randomly examining students and found a disturbing and growing incidence
of what is known as noise-induced hearing loss. Usually, it means they've
lost the ability to hear higher frequencies, evidenced at times by mild
ear-ringing or trouble following conversations in noisy situations. Hearing specialists say they're also seeing more people
in their 30s and 40s - many of them among the first Walkman users - who
suffer from more pronounced tinnitus, an internal ringing or even the
sound of whooshing or buzzing in the ears. "It may be that we're
seeing the tip of the iceberg now," says Dr. John Oghalai, director
of The Hearing Center at Texas Children's Hospital in Houston, who's treating
more of this age group. "I would not be surprised if we start
to see even more of this." Noise-induced hearing loss happens any number of ways,
from attending noisy concerts and clubs to using firearms or loud power
tools and even recreational vehicles (snowmobiles and some motorcycles
are among the offenders). Today, doctors say many people also are wearing headphones,
not just to enjoy music, but also to block out ambient noise on buses,
trains or just the street. And all of it can contribute to hearing loss. "The tricky part is that you don't know early
on. It takes multiple exposures and sometimes years to find out,"
says Dr. Colin Driscoll, an otologist at Minnesota's Mayo Clinic. With long-lasting rechargeable batteries, people who
use portable music players also are listening longer - and not giving
their ears a rest, says Deanna Meinke, an audiologist at the University
of Northern Colorado who heads the National Hearing Conservation Association's
task force on children and hearing. Often, she says, people also turn up the volume to
ear-damaging levels. A survey published this summer by Australia's National
Acoustic Laboratories found, for instance, that about 25 percent of people
using portable stereos had daily noise exposures high enough to cause
hearing damage. And further research by Britain's Royal National Institute
for Deaf People determined that young people, ages 18 to 24, were more
likely than other adults to exceed safe listening limits. How much is too much?
To that end, professional musicians have formed Hearing Education and
Awareness for Rockers (HEAR) to promote hearing protection. And Meinke's
committee is developing a teacher kit with a meter to show dangerous levels
of sound - something educators in Oregon also have demonstrated with a
Web-based program called Dangerous Decibels. |
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