-    -    -    -     -    -    -    -     -    -    -    -     -    -    -    -    
Hearing Loss Products and Services
Advertise on Hearing Loss Web
Search This Site or the Web

Free Email Newsletter

Jobs, Jobs, Jobs

Hearing Loss Web Banner
Discussion Forum
In the News!
Last Update: Aug 19
-    -    -    -     -    -    -    -     -    -    -    -     -    -    -    -    
 
Home
About Us
Search
New to Hearing Loss?
In the News
Discussion Forum
HOH-LD-News
Advertise
Contact Us
Glossary
Events
 
Issues
Access
Oral Communications
Emergency Planning
Employment
Family
Hearing Aid Affordability
Identity
Law Enforcement
Psychological
Services
Medical
Audiology
Causes
Cures
Meniere's Disease
Tinnitus
Local Resources
Employment Opportunities
 
Education Opportunities
Hearing Loss Products and Services
Advocates and Legal
Captioning
Government
Hearing Aids
Hearing Aid Repair
Hearing Dogs
Hearing Loss Organizations
Hints and Tips
Publications
Technology
Alerting Devices
Assistive Listening Devices
Cochlear Implants
Hearing Aids
Speech Recognition
Telephones
Two Way Pagers
TTYs (TDDs)
Visual Communications
Links

Smoking and weight-gain linked to hearing loss

Editor: We've known for a long time that smoking and overeating aren't very good for us. But did you know that they can lead to hearing loss?

Here's the story from the folks at RNID,

~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~

June 2008

Smoking is a risk factor in the development of age-related hearing loss, one of the largest ever studies into risk factors for hearing loss has found.

The study - led by Professor Van Camp at the University of Antwerp and funded by RNID, the charity for deaf and hard of hearing people - found that smoking, being over-weight and occupational noise are major risk factors in developing the UK's most common type of hearing loss.

The study found that people who smoke regularly for more than one year had worse hearing than those who had never smoked and that the more you smoke (number of years x number of packs per day) the greater the severity of hearing loss.

As well as the effects of smoking and the research brings to light a correlation between being over-weight and decreased hearing ability and also confirms that exposure to noise contributes to hearing loss in later life - exposure to excessive noise

Dr Mark Downs, RNID's Executive Director of Technology and Enterprise says: "This exciting new research shows that you're not just harming your heart and lungs when you have a cigarette - you could be putting your hearing at risk too.

"With an ageing population age-related hearing loss is something that we need to take seriously. Losing your hearing in later life can make it harder to maintain contact with friends and families and lead to isolation and/or depression - so making small concessions now could have an enormous effect in the long term.

"Making sure you keep your weight down and generally leading a healthy lifestyle is not only good for your heart but also good for your ears."