iPod Safety: Preventing Hearing Loss in Teens

JamieLynn

Active Member
Joined
Jan 15, 2009
Messages
3,324
Reaction score
0
This article was posted on another message board and thought I'd post it here too. I have to admit that I listen to loud music rather often... then again... reading the article I am wondering, how much loud is too loud? :shrug: They talk about percentage level that you are "ok" with if listening on a daily basis *sigh*.

I try to listen to music at a loud level only for a limited amount of time. I am living in a big building where I can't just listen to loud music any time I want. Plus I don't feel like bothering my neighbors... :roll: Dance/Trance/Techno just isn't the same if listened softly :giggle:

Anyway, here's the article

iPod Safety: Preventing Hearing Loss in Teens - TIME


If you're one of the 173 million iPod users out there, you're probably reading this with your earbuds in.

Take them out. Even if only for a few minutes while you read this article.

Trust us, your hearing will thank you for it. While many music lovers are aware that listening to iPods and MP3 players at high volumes can lead to hearing loss, not many of them — especially not teens — do anything about it. In fact, when teens are pressured by friends or family to turn down the volume on their iPods, they do exactly what you'd expect them to do: they turn the volume up instead. Even teens who express concern about the risk of hearing loss listen to music at potentially dangerous levels — higher on average than kids who say they're not worried about deafness.

Go figure. But that's what researchers at Colorado University and Children's Hospital in Boston found in a small study of 30 young iPod users. Led by Cory Portnuff, an audiologist at Colorado who began studying iPod-related hearing loss in 2006, the study found that teens not only tend to play music louder than adults, but they are often unaware of how loud they're playing it. "I honestly don't believe that most people understand they are putting themselves at risk, or at what level of risk," says Portnuff.

Portnuff has documented that listening to earbuds, or in-ear headphones, for 90 minutes a day at 80% volume is probably safe for long-term hearing — a useful cutoff point to keep in mind. (But softer is better: you can safely tune in at 70% volume for about 4½ hours a day.) The risk of permanent hearing loss, Portnuff says, can increase with just five minutes of exposure a day to music at full volume. Over time, the noise can damage the delicate hair cells in the inner ear that transform sound waves to the electrical signals that the brain understands as sound.

So why would anyone ever listen to an iPod at maximum volume? Again, it's a simple misunderstanding of risk. Portnuff speculates that teens who say they worry about hearing loss but still listen to their iPods at high volumes probably assume that the manufacturer's maximum default setting is safe, or that turning the volume down to anything but full-blast is harmless. (Read "The Year in Medicine 2008: From A to Z.")

Add to these misconceptions the fact that people are listening to music for longer periods of time — today's long-lasting batteries can crank out music for 15 hours or more — and it's no wonder that the risk of hearing loss is increasing. But perhaps so is the concern. In 2006 a Louisiana man filed suit against Apple, claiming that iPods are "not sufficiently adorned with adequate warnings regarding the likelihood of hearing loss." Soon after, health authorities in France demanded increased safety measures. So the company, based in Cupertino, Calif., revised its software to set the maximum volume at 100 dB (the equivalent of standing next to a pneumatic drill) for devices sold in Europe. Portnuff says certain devices sold in the U.S. can reach beyond 100 dB, however; some have recorded levels as high as 115 dB, similiar to a chainsaw or rock concert.

Portnuff acknowledges that most iPod and MP3 users don't keep their devices at maximum volume — only about 7% to 24% listen at risky levels. But because most of us can, and are, spending more time listening to music through headphones, there is a real risk of hearing loss for anyone who plugs in. "It's a matter of how high you listen and for how long," he says. Listen for too high and too long, and you may have to replace those headphones with hearing aids in the not-too-distant future.
 
Not always iPod and MP3, the first cause from spend on telephone all the time, cause 10 to 20 percent into loss hearing. It happen long time ago before awesome tech boom up.
 
I say let them listen loudly if they want! The more they lose their hearing, the more they will understand our needs and we won't have to fight as much for things we need!
 
I say let them listen loudly if they want! The more they lose their hearing, the more they will understand our needs and we won't have to fight as much for things we need!

I understand what you mean, but still think it's very important to educate the youngsters about the risks.

Sometimes I wonder how ipods are even able to play music at such high decibels at the first place. Same goes for cars that can go fast whereas one is only allowed a certain maximum speed on freeways, etc... :roll:

Everything should be limited so it can't be exceeded. End of story. :giggle:

JamieLynn
 
I understand what you mean, but still think it's very important to educate the youngsters about the risks.

Sometimes I wonder how ipods are even able to play music at such high decibels at the first place. Same goes for cars that can go fast whereas one is only allowed a certain maximum speed on freeways, etc... :roll:

Everything should be limited so it can't be exceeded. End of story. :giggle:

JamieLynn

But there will always be someone that is smart enough to re-engineer these devices to exceed the limit. Remember the kid that unlocked the iPhone?? He got a new car out of that deal to keep the secret quiet. Although Im sure the newer iPhones are made to where the consumer can't hack into it whatsoever and must be sent back to Apple for repairs.

As for me, I listen to my iPod at max because that's the level at which I can hear it. I know it is loud and can be annoying for my mates around me as I'm told that they can hear a buzzing noise when I have the headphones on.

My rule of thumb would be if your listening to your music then you begin to get dizzy or get a headache or if your ears ring, you've got the volume too high and need to turn it down.
 
I say let them listen loudly if they want! The more they lose their hearing, the more they will understand our needs and we won't have to fight as much for things we need!

To me it sounds more like everybody in the world will have a little trouble hearing and having a mild hearing loss becomes normal, then the moderately+ deaf are left in the dust.
 
But there will always be someone that is smart enough to re-engineer these devices to exceed the limit. Remember the kid that unlocked the iPhone??

My rule of thumb would be if your listening to your music then you begin to get dizzy or get a headache or if your ears ring, you've got the volume too high and need to turn it down.


I know there will always be people able to crack the code :giggle: It's kind of pointless but then again, if we see it that way, why are we even bothering mentioning it? :cool2: We could go on endlessly and we still wouldn't find any answer... people simply should be aware of what they are doing. They have to learn what is right and what is wrong, good and bad,... some people just don't know. In this case, teenies have to learn that listening to loud music is bad and listening to softer music is good! That's all :D

Since I listen to loud music every once in a while I still try to be aware of how long I have been listening to loud music, you know, just in case... :cool2:

JamieLynn
 
Back
Top