This week I’ve been thinking a lot about football, both
collegiate and professional. After all,
we are now in the early season for both, and there’s plenty of excitement for
everybody as our favorite teams play rivals!
What teams will make it to the end and be “crowned” champs?
The other reason I’ve been thinking about football revolves
around the posts I’ve seen on social media – you know the ones, where parents
and grandparents have posted pictures of their beautiful children and grandchildren at the
games, from infants to toddlers and young children. Usually, these beautiful youngsters are
dressed in the colors and costumes representing their family’s teams. Then, I was thinking about the noise at the
stadiums and how I had been overwhelmed by it as an adult. How do you think a
child (of any age) might be affected?
In my city, this weekend was one where the Guinness people
(the ones who determine whether records have been broken) were in town to
measure the sound at our home game to see if our stadium would break the record
- be louder than any other team’s stadium.
The record was said to be equivalent to a jet engine taking off in
decibels, around 136 decibels. The CDC tells us a person with hearing hears
sounds 0-140 decibels: greater than 90 decibels might cause pain. That being said, a rock concert may weigh in
at 110 decibels, and once they are greater than 120 decibels, not only is the
sound painful but also can actually result in permanent hearing loss! Here’s a link to a great video explaining
this: http://www.asha.org/Buds/How-the-Ear-Works/
While the attendants were certainly primarily adult, there
were some children seen as the camera scanned the crowd.
So I was wondering: what (if anything) has been done to
protect the hearing of these youngsters?
According to the American Tinnitus Association, based in Portland,
Oregon, an adult might be affected by temporary of permanent tinnitus, which
might be prevented by the use of earplugs.
Why should we worry about the impact of these levels of sound on the
hearing of babies and children? Well,
consider the ways in which we are surrounded by loud sounds, ranging from
normal everyday traffic and yard care implements (like some lawnmowers and
trimmers) to the use of video games with their soundtracks made to simulate
gunfire and other sudden loud bursts of sound.
We are so used to these assaults, we may not consider them unusual at
all! But, according to the National Institutes
of Health, many teenagers are affected by this kind of loss of hearing – up to
20%, which has increased steadily since 1990!
Because the tiny little hairs inside the ear become damaged (and are not
regenerated) with this kind of loss, the hearing loss is considered
permanent. While adults are surely able
to make choices that may lead to hearing impairment, such as unprotected
participation in activities with loud sound, what about their children? How might they be protected while still being
included in family activities?
The American Speech-Language Hearing Association (ASHA) has
some great suggestions on their website, including excellent information for
parents, which you can find here: http://www.asha.org/Buds/Information-for-Parents/
I think we usually associate hearing loss in children with
those a bit older – usually because of the use of ear buds and loud music. Maybe the real solution for the little ones,
such as the babies, is to stay at home with a reliable caregiver while the rest
of the family attends the game, judging the ways they will protect their own
hearing! Certainly the effort to
safeguard the baby and young child’s hearing is worth it – especially when you
take a look at the consequences for this kind of exposure: http://www.cdc.gov/ncbddd/hearingloss/facts.html
At the levels of sound being aimed for at the sporting
events, wearing earmuffs and earplugs is a reasonable approach for everybody,
especially the children who attend!
What do you think?
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