Now hear this: Ear `buds' are cool, but the price may be
too steep
by Steve Svekis
Editor: You may be getting sick of reading articles about the dangers of
cranking up the volume, but I think it's great that the word is getting out.
Here's an article about this issue, and it has a personal touch. Thanks to
Steve Svekis of the South Florida Sun-Sentinel for permission to share his
thoughts.
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
Ring. Ring. Ring. For most people, that's an incoming phone call. To me?
That's life in my inner ear. A continuous, audible ring (or is it a whir?)
pesters me every waking moment. The condition is called tinnitus. In the
early 1980s, when I felt invincible, I didn't mind my temporary bouts with
ringing in the ears, which followed about two hours of live rock and roll
cacophony at an acoustically challenged venue. Van Halen at the old
Hollywood Sportatorium (more than once) comes to mind.
Back then, the ringing was gone in a day or two. Somewhere along the way,
though, the concerts and hours blasting the stereo in college caught up with
me. Now, it's omnipresent, as if it were an ill-conceived tattoo from a
lifetime ago.
And, to think, I pounded my eardrums back then without the help of the
insert-into-the-ear "buds" that have become common as MP3 players have
exploded onto the market.
According to hear-it.org, a Web site established to increase public
awareness of hearing impairment (and which won a 2000 International Web Page
Award for Best in Health), ear buds can send up to nine more decibels into
the ear drum than a pair of conventional headphones at the same setting.
That's approximately the difference between a vacuum cleaner and a
motorcycle.
The hearing damage occurs when tiny hair cells in the ear's cochlea are
damaged. These hair cells cannot be regenerated in human beings.
The iPod player is capable of producing 130 decibels (sound pressure
level), though the maximum volume of a downloaded music file tends to max
out at between 105 and 110.
The Occupational Safety and Health Administration (OSHA) states that
people should not listen to noise at a level of 110 dBA for more than a
half-hour in a day (www.osha.gov/pls/oshaweb/owadisp.show_document
?p_id=9735&p_table=STANDARDS).
Should children be held to a different standard, though?
Yes, says Dr. Ali Danesh, an associate professor of audiology at Florida
Atlantic University in Boca Raton.
"This is a particularly alarming issue for children," Danesh said. "You
must factor in that the smaller ear canal of a child is exposed to a greater
sound pressure level than an adult listening to the same signal. When the
space gets smaller, the sound gets louder. That's just a fact."
Danesh, whose FAU Speech and Hearing Clinic will be hosting Tinnitus
Awareness Day from 9 a.m. to noon June 21, added that the portability of the
fashionable MP3 players has youngsters not only getting louder signals, but
also getting them for a bigger chunk of the day than in years past.
So, what can you do to protect your kids if you're a parent?
Apple has been proactive with the matter. The company offers a free iPod
Software Update 1.1.1 (www.apple.com/ipod/download), which allows someone to
program in the point on the volume bar that will be the new maximum volume.
In the latest issue of Audiology Today, a table was produced to give
people a general guide to help with pre-setting the iPod maximum volume.
Some of the key parts of the table: At 50 percent, the iPod produces a
free-field-equivalent measurement of 81 dBA.
At 81 dBA, people can listen for 19 hours. At 60 percent, or 87 dBA, the
maximum recommended duration of listening time reduces to 4.5 hours. At 70
percent (92 dBA): 98 minutes. At 106 dBA (the 90-percent figure), people
should not have any more exposure than four minutes in a day.
Also, noise-canceling headphones are a healthier option than the buds --
ranging from sub-$30 models all the way to the ultra-expensive fitted
earphones that professional musicians use, which run for about $900. An
online article by Apple expert Kirk McElhearn offers a variety of options to
this end (www.ilounge.com/index.php/articles/comments/listen-safely-your-ears-and-your-ipod/).
The headphones keep ambient noise (traffic, others' conversation, etc.)
from leaking in, ostensibly allowing one to hear intended music without
lathering it with harmful increased volume to surmount the background noise.
Sure, many kids will listen to their favorite music as loud as is
possible. Always. Just the way it is. As I said: been there, done that.
And the minimally visible earbuds are usually going to be a fashion
choice over the more bulky, reasonably priced alternatives.
But I'm still hoping some will take the experts' advice, and not consider
this effort so much background noise.