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- <text id=91TT1716>
- <title>
- Aug. 05, 1991: Now Hear This -- If You Can
- </title>
- <history>
- TIME--The Weekly Newsmagazine--1991
- Aug. 05, 1991 Was It Worth It?
- </history>
- <article>
- <source>Time Magazine</source>
- <hdr>
- HEALTH, Page 50
- Now Hear This--If You Can
- </hdr><body>
- <p>Americans are amazingly tolerant of the noise that engulfs them
- at work and play. They shouldn't be. The din causes millions to
- lose their hearing, slowly but surely.
- </p>
- <p>By Anastasia Toufexis--Reported by Barbara Dolan/Chicago, with
- other bureaus
- </p>
- <p> Diane Russ of Evanston, Ill. never stays in the kitchen
- when the dishwasher is running. She wouldn't think of using
- power tools without wearing earplugs. And on weekends she keeps
- her windows closed. "Some mornings you can't walk outside
- because so many people are using their power mowers," she
- laments. "It's very noisy out there." Who would dispute it? From
- the roar of airplanes to the wail of sirens, the blast of
- stereos to the blare of movie sound tracks, noise is a constant
- part of American life. But few go to the lengths Russ does to
- avoid it. Noise is annoying and frustrating--and accepted.
- </p>
- <p> That tolerant attitude needs to change--and fast.
- Increasingly, the racket that surrounds us is being recognized
- not only as an environmental nuisance but also as a severe
- health hazard. About 28 million Americans, or 11%, suffer
- serious hearing loss, and more than a third of the cases result
- from too much exposure to loud noise. Last week specialists
- testifying before a House committee documented an alarming new
- trend: more and more of the victims of noise-induced deafness
- are adolescents and even younger children. "We need to get
- people thinking the same way about protecting their ears as they
- now do about protecting their eyes," says Dr. James Snow Jr.,
- director of the National Institute on Deafness and Other
- Communication Disorders. "There is so much noise we're exposed
- to that we tend to become complacent about it."
- </p>
- <p> Much of the clamor is unavoidable because it fills work
- sites or public places. As many as 10 million Americans are
- exposed daily to on-the-job noise that could gradually cause
- some degree of permanent hearing loss. Sixty million Americans
- endure other noise, including the cacophony of city traffic,
- that is louder than the level the Federal Government deems safe,
- and 15 million live close to busy airports or beneath heavily
- traveled air routes. In some neighborhoods of northern New
- Jersey, more than 1,000 flights thunder overhead each day.
- </p>
- <p> Much of the punishment, though, is voluntary.
- "Unfortunately," says Russ, an audiologist at Northwestern
- University's hearing clinic, "most of us unnecessarily increase
- the burden of noise we put ourselves under in our private
- lives." Homeowners endure the steady whine of everything from
- chain saws and power lawn mowers to vacuum cleaners and
- dishwashers. And the din of leisure activities can be just as
- dangerous as the roar from the factory floor. "We have laws to
- protect the hearing of workers in noisy workplaces," says senior
- scientist William Clark of the Central Institute for the Deaf
- in St. Louis. "But there are no laws covering recreational
- noises." The most hazardous pastimes by far are hunting and
- target shooting--enjoyed by nearly 13% of the population. A
- single crack of gunfire can hit 130 decibels or more, easily
- exceeding the danger level of 85 decibels.
- </p>
- <p> Children lead some of the most raucous lives of all. Noisy
- activities range from playing with cap guns to practicing with
- school bands to riding the school bus. Of greatest concern,
- however, is youngsters' devotion to amplified music. Rock
- concerts can surpass 110 decibels, though they are more of a
- threat to musicians than to audience members, who endure the
- punishing pounding for only an hour or two.
- </p>
- <p> The most endangered kids are those who wander around with
- cassette players blaring music into their skulls for hours.
- These personal stereos can funnel blasts of 110 decibels or more
- into the ear. "If you can hear the music from a Walkman someone
- next to you is wearing, they are damaging their ears," declares
- Dr. Jerome Goldstein of the American Academy of Otolaryngology.
- After years of such assaults, notes audiologist Dean Garstecki,
- head of the hearing-impairment program at Northwestern
- University, "we've got 21-year-olds walking around with
- hearing-loss patterns of people 40 years their senior."
- </p>
- <p> The ear is an amazingly flexible organ, but it simply was
- not designed to withstand the strain of modern living. Hearing
- naturally deteriorates with advancing years, but not by much.
- Mabaan tribesmen in the Sudan, for example, who have never been
- exposed to industrial sounds, maintain their hearing into old
- age. Sudden intense noise, like a gunshot or dynamite blast, can
- damage hearing instantly by tearing the tissue in the delicate
- inner ear. Sustained noise from a jackhammer or disco music is
- more insidious. The prolonged barrage flattens the tiny hair
- cells in the inner ear that transmit sound to the nerves. As the
- hairs wilt, people often feel a fullness or pressure in the ears
- or a buzzing or ringing, known as tinnitus.
- </p>
- <p> Such symptoms soon subside and the hairs regain their
- upright posture--if the ear gets some rest. But unrelenting
- noisy assaults can eventually cause the hair cells to lose their
- resilience and die. They do not regenerate, and the result is
- a gradual loss of hearing.
- </p>
- <p> Those who cannot escape exposure to loud or prolonged
- noise should wear ear protectors, which can muffle sound by
- about 35 decibels. National Institute on Deafness director Snow
- contends that such protective gear should be as commonplace for
- children as bicycle helmets and infant car seats. His institute
- and other organizations are launching programs to educate
- children about hazards to hearing. And musicians who have
- suffered hearing loss, including Pete Townshend of the Who, are
- helping spread the message about the price of high-decibel rock.
- "We teach kids to keep their hands off the hot stove," says Jeff
- Baxter of the Doobie Brothers. "Let's do the same with their
- hearing."
- </p>
- <p> Efforts are also beginning to be made to attack
- unavoidable noise pollution. John Wayne International Airport
- in Orange County, Calif., boasts the toughest runway noise
- standards in the country. Observers can stand on the field and
- carry on conversations in normal tones, even as jets take off
- and land. Los Angeles International Airport has pledged to be
- equally quiet by the end of the decade.
- </p>
- <p> Some communities are starting to enforce antinoise
- ordinances more vigorously. New York City, arguably the noisiest
- urban center in the country, issued 1,000 citations last year,
- up from 700 in 1988, primarily targeting air-conditioning
- equipment, discos, street construction machinery and horn
- blowing. In Southern California, police in National City and
- Redondo Beach have been empowered to confiscate big speakers
- installed in autos to make them what are known as "boom cars."
- Says officer Michael Harlan of National City: "If we hear a boom
- car 50 ft. or more away on a public street, we can cite the
- driver."
- </p>
- <p> Noise is a low priority of the U.S. government. In fact,
- the Reagan Administration closed the Environmental Protection
- Agency's noise-control office in 1982 and dropped noise-emission
- labeling on such items as power tools and lawn mowers. Hearing
- experts call for a return of noise-emission information as well
- as new warning labels on audio equipment that can produce
- dangerously high decibel levels.
- </p>
- <p> The ultimate hope, says Dr. Patrick Brookhouser of Boys
- Town National Research Hospital in Omaha, is that people will
- realize "when you lose hearing you lose, to some degree, one of
- our most vital attributes, the ability to interact with our
- environment." In other words, Americans should be making the
- most noise about noise itself.
- </p>
-
- </body></article>
- </text>
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