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Saturday, January 18, 2025

Test your knowledge: Are these hearing tips fact or fiction?

Life can get loud. Protecting our hearing is important, but not everyone considers the damage certain things may be causing.

Dr. Maeve Derrig, an audiologist with Aurora Health Care in Pleasant Prairie, Wis., dispels myths about hearing damage and offers tips for keeping your ears safe.

#1: Swimming underwater often leads to ear infections.

Fiction. Outer ear infections, or otitis externa, commonly referred to as “swimmer’s ear,” is not very common, having a lifetime prevalence of about 10%. They are caused by bacteria in the ear canal due to moisture or exposure to contaminated water. Some individuals, including children, are more susceptible to ear infections. Wearing swim plugs to keep water out of the ear can help.

#2: Consider wearing hearing protection when attending a concert or fireworks display.

Fact. Concerts can be extremely loud and can damage your hearing. Fireworks shows can also harm your hearing depending on how close you are to the “blasts.” On average, fireworks produce 150 decibels of noise. According to the Hearing Health Foundation, noise over 70 decibels over a prolonged time period can cause hearing damage, and sounds over 120 decibels can cause immediate harm. If you are safely setting off the fireworks or are in the vicinity of them being set off, you should wear hearing protection. If you are watching from a distance, use your best judgment. At the end of the day, it never hurts to protect your ears.

#3: Hearing damage only occurs from prolonged exposure to loud sounds.

Fiction. Damage can occur from one instance, such as a firework, or from prolonged exposure, like working in a factory. Occupational Health and Safety Administration (OSHA) sets standards for the workplace on how much noise an employee can be exposed to during an eight-hour day and at what point a person must wear hearing protection. Always use hearing protection when you are in the presence of excessively loud noises such as lawn mowers, power tools, motor sports and gunshots. Just one exposure to a loud noise can permanently damage your hearing.

#4: Only newborns need their hearing screened.

Fiction. Babies have their hearing screened at birth, but the American Academy of Pediatrics recommend children be screened at the pediatrician’s office at ages 4, 5, 6, 8, 10 years old, once between 11-14 years and once between 15-17. A child should see an audiologist for a formal hearing evaluation if:

Their speech and language is delayed

They fail a school or pediatrician screening

They have a history of ear infections

They report hearing issues to their parents

Adults 60 years of age and older should consider getting a baseline hearing test. Warning signs of hearing loss include:

Ringing in the ears

Trouble hearing in background noise

Feeling like people aren’t speaking clearly or mumbling

Having to ask people to repeat themselves often

Being told you watch the television too loudly

If you are concerned about you or your child’s hearing, speak with your primary care physician or their pediatrician, who may refer you to an audiologist.

Original source can be found here.

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