Birds singing, waves crashing, your favourite music – these are sounds that some of us take for granted. Sadly, for the estimated nine million people in the UK who are deaf or hard of hearing, these are often sounds that they will never hear.
Ahead of World Hearing Day on 3rd March, we look at why protecting your hearing is a must. Noise pollution is defined as unwanted or excessive sound that can have harmful effects on human health and environmental quality. Everyone’s individual perception of noise is of course different, but noise pollution usually applies to noises and sounds which are unnatural in either their volume or production, or that are alien to their environment.
On a day-to-day basis, we are surrounded by a cacophony of noises. From our mobile phone ringing, music blaring from headphones, the sounds on our daily commute and loud neighbours, noise pollution is everywhere, and majority of the time it’s unwanted. This intrusive noise can be irritating and sustained over a long period of time can be detrimental to our health.
Harmful sound
There has been an abundance of research highlighting the links between excessive noise and heart disease, hearing loss, a spike in stress hormones and even insomnia. In terms of human hearing, any loud or unwanted sounds that our ears can’t filter can cause dam-age. This is why it is something that shouldn’t be ignored. Sound is measured in decibels (dB) and anything above 85bB is deemed harmful. This is why WHO recommend a limit of no more than 85 dB for eight hours a day. To put that into perspective, an everyday conversation is about 50dB while your daily alarm clock ringing reaches 60 dB. So 85dB is not as loud as you think. As awareness increases around noise pollution, so does the need for noise mitigation and protection.
Noise protection
Protecting your hearing is a must and something we should all focus on. Here are some useful tips on what you can do: