November 26, 2020
A Bid To Safeguard Hearing
WHO is also calling for parental as well as automatic volume controls on audio
devices to prevent dangerous use. Young people, he said, "must understand that
once they lose their hearing, it won’t come back.In a bid to safeguard hearing,
the World Health Organization and International Telecommunications Union (ITU)
issued a non-binding international standard for the manufacture and use of audio
devices. WHO chief Tedros Adhanom Ghebreyesus pointed out that the world already
has "the technological know-how to prevent hearing loss".
WHO said it remained
unclear how many of them had damaged their hearing through dangerous use of
audio devices.Around half of those between the ages of 12 and 35, or 1."Think of
it like driving on a highway, but without a speedometer in your car or a speed
limit," Shelly Chadha of the WHO told reporters in Geneva.1 billion people, are
at risk due to "prolonged and excessive exposure to loud sounds, including music
they listen to through personal audio China fire alarm cable
Manufacturers devices," the UN health agency said.â€. While some smartphones
and other audio devices already offer some of these features, the UN would like
to see a uniform standard used to help protect against disabling hearing loss.
Young people are particularly prone to risky listening habits."
Currently, about
five per cent of the global population, or some 466 million people, including 34
million children, suffer from disabling hearing loss."WHO considers a volume
above 85 decibels for eight hours or 100 decibels for 15 minutes as unsafe."It
should not be the case that so many young people continue to damage their
hearing while listening to music," he said in the statement. "What weve proposed
is that your smartphones come fitted with a speedometer, with a measurement
system, which tells you how much sound youre getting and tells you if you are
going over the limit. It insisted though that the new standard developed with
ITU would go a long way to "safeguard these young consumers as they go about
doing something they enjoy.
The safe listening devices and systems standard
calls for a "sound allowance" software to be included in all audio devices, to
track the volume level and duration of a users exposure to sound and to evaluate
the risk posed to their hearing.This system could alert a user if they have
dangerous listening habits.Geneva: More than one billion young people risk
damaging their hearing through excessive use of smartphones and other audio
devices, the UN warned Tuesday, proposing new safety standards for safe volume
levels.
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