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                          | Teenagers urged to turn down iPods as hearing loss rises August 18, 2010
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 Apple iPod Nanos in San Francisco, September 5, 2007. -  Reuters picNEW YORK, Aug 18 — Teenagers are being urged to turn down the volume on  their iPods after a US study found hearing problems among youngsters have risen by  nearly a third in 15 years.
                         The study, published in the Journal of the  American Medical Association, compared national surveys from the early 1990s  and the mid 2000s. Each included only a few thousand teens aged 12 to 19 but  was designed to represent the whole country.                         In the first survey, about 15 percent of  teenagers were found by trained staff to have some degree of hearing loss. Some  15 years later, that number had risen by a third, to nearly 20 per cent — or  one in every five teenagers.                         “That’s a few kids per classroom who will have  hearing problems,” researcher Dr Josef Shargorodsky of Brigham and Women’s  Hospital in Boston told Reuters Health.                         “Teenagers really underestimate how much noise  they are exposed to. Often the individual won’t notice it, but even slight  hearing loss may lead to differences in language development and learning.”The study (http://link.reuters.com/nyz95m) found  most of the hearing loss was in one ear only but the extent of loss was getting  worse.
                         For while it was usually slight, one in 20  adolescents had more pronounced problems — up 50 per cent since the first  survey.                         Shargorodsky said he was surprised by the new  findings. He said better medical care for ear infections — one of the usual  suspects in hearing damage — should in theory have decreased the numbers.                         The researchers did not single out personal  listening devices or iPods for the growing problem.                         They said the reasons for the rise were unclear  as teenagers, when asked about noise exposure - on the job, from firearms or  recreational activities, for instance - didn’t indicate any change.                         But Shargorodsky said that might not necessarily  be true as few people would call it noise when they listen to music on their  MP3 player, for instance.                         “We knew from before that it is difficult to ask  this age group about noise exposure — they underestimate it,” he said.
                        “Some risk factors, such as loud sound exposure  from listing to music, may be of particular importance to adolescents,” the  report said.                         Alison Grimes, who manages the audiology clinic  at Ronald Reagan-UCLA Medical Center in Los    Angeles, said  although it’s not clear that these devices are to blame, it was still a good  idea to turn down the volume and take frequent breaks from listening. — Reuters   |