iPod Hearing Loss Protection for Boomers: Five HearPod
Solutions
By Randy Wohlers
Editor: Boomers listening to iPods? I'm sure many do, but I normally
think of younger folks when I think of the typical iPod user. In any case
Randy Wohlers offers some good advice for iPod listeners of ANY age!
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Since their debut in the marketplace, iPods have revolutionized the way
we listen to music. iPod hard drives store up to 300 hours of music,
batteries last for 12 hours, and the volume can be cranked up to 120
decibels. That's louder than a chain saw or pneumatic drill, and equivalent
to a jet plane taking off! But iPod fans are being warned to turn their
music down. Even manufacturer, Apple, includes a cautionary note with every
iPod, warning, "permanent hearing loss may occur if earphones or headphones
are used at high volume."
Currently, 16 million baby boomers have hearing loss and the number is
expected to surge to 78 million by 2030. Amazingly, nearly three-quarters of
them admit that they have never visited a doctor or hearing health
specialist to have a hearing test. In spite of this lack of concern, there
are more boomers aged 46 to 64 with hearing loss than seniors over the age
of 65 with the same condition, and hearing loss among baby boomers is 26
percent more common than in previous generations.
Loud music and noise causes hearing loss by damaging the delicate hair
nerve cells in the cochlea, a part of the inner ear that helps transmit
sound impulses to the brain. These hair cells often recover from temporary
damage. However, permanent damage can occur with prolonged exposure to
extremely loud or moderately loud noise. When these nerve hair cells are
destroyed, irreversible hearing loss results.
Many people who listen to iPods in noisy environments pump up the volume
to dangerous levels to drown out background noise. Busy city hubs and subway
noise (around 90 decibels) are already sufficiently loud to cause permanent
damage with considerable exposure. Although the damage from chronic exposure
to these sound levels is generally slow, it is cumulative. Music lovers who
tolerate noise levels above 85 decibels for long periods will end up with
irreversible hearing loss.
Here are five steps you can take to protect yourself from hearing loss:
1. Limit the volume of your iPod to 60 decibels (db), about two-thirds of
the maximum volume.
2. Try to limit listening to no more than 60 minutes a day.
3. Wear sound-isolating or noise-canceling headphones that fit over the
ear, instead of ear buds that are inserted directly in the ear. This is
because when using ear buds, you still hear the external noise. You turn up
the volume to drown out the noise, boosting the sound signals by as much as
six to nine decibels over the noise. You can hear the music from your iPod,
but you are unaware of the excessive volume.
4. Take advantage of the free download Apple is now offering for the iPod
Nano, and iPod models with video-playback capabilities. The download
contains a setting to limit the volume.
5. If you are experiencing tinnitus (ringing in the ears), muffled sound
after listening to your iPod, or you are having difficulty hearing
conversations, visit to a physician and take a hearing test.
During my first 20 years in hearing health practice, our clientele were
mainly seniors around 75 years of age. However, over the past 10 years, I
have noticed a huge difference in our clientele. Nowadays, baby boomers of
all ages are making appointments, and most of them have noise-induced
hearing loss.
Loud rock music and living life 'full on' in an amplified noisy society
have contributed to hearing loss amongst baby boomers. Nevertheless, if we
follow the iPod 60-60 Protection Plan, we can enjoy our iPods and continue
to live life to the fullest.
About the Author:
Randy Wohlers BC HIS, is the founder of
MyHearPod.com, the first online baby
boomer 100% digital hearing aids solutions company for baby boomers. Boomer
Wohlers owns six of the largest hearing health practices in Hawaii, and
publishes the monthly ezine "Baby Boomer Hearing Aid Solutions." Visit
MyHearPod.com today and take the complimentary HearPod hearing test at
http://www.myhearpod.com/hearing_test.html.