Currently viewing Vol. 2 • Issue 4 • 2015

Australian HEARsmart Targets Unhealthy Listening Habits

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PIC3_slider_mike_v3Late last year, the Australian-based HEARing Cooperative Research Centre (HEARing CRC) launched HEARsmart™ – a new initiative to promote smarter hearing habits to reducing preventable noise-induced hearing loss associated with loud leisure noise. According to The World Health Organisation (WHO), hearing loss now affects an estimated 360 million people worldwide, making it the most common global sensory disability. WHO’s recent international campaign “Make Listening Safe” stresses that many of these individuals could have avoided hearing loss by adopting healthier hearing habits.

HEARsmart is a broad initiative that targets research and promotional campaigns at specific groups engaged in high-risk behaviours, as well as venues and legislative authorities involved in creating or regulating environments where excessive leisure noise occurs. Through HEARsmart, the HEARing CRC is working closely with other organisations active in the hearing and music industry arena such as Australian Hearing, the National Acoustic Laboratories (NAL), the Australian Deafness Foundation, The Deafness Forum Australia, Vic Deaf and Music Victoria.

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The HEARsmart website: hearsmart.org.

Using an evidence base from HEARing CRC research for guidance, HEARsmart is targeting the groups most at risk of acquiring a noise-induced hearing loss and/or tinnitus in the longer term. HEARing CRC chief executive officer, Professor Bob Cowan said it’s a fact of life that young people in particular develop a keen interest in music. This can result in a much higher risk of acquiring a hearing loss through prolonged exposure to amplified sound, while playing instruments or listening to music at home, at gigs and at nightclubs, whether for work or for pleasure.

“Our aim is to develop and provide practical and proven solutions to help individuals and organisations alike to be aware of the risks and to protect their hearing, or the hearing of others, and make listening safe as well as enjoyable for all,” Professor Cowan explained.

In late 2014, Know Your Noise (knowyournoise.nal.gov.au) was the first HEARsmart promotional campaign. It was driven primarily by social media and the distribution of postcards Australia-wide (via Avant Card) and promoted the Know Your Noise website, and its two main features:

  • a hearing test to help visitors determine their ability to hear speech in noise - this does not replace the need for clinical hearing assessments, but may recommend clinical follow up; and
  • an online noise risk calculator that enables users to discover their personal risk of developing hearing loss as a consequence of their current listening habits, such as going to nightclubs, music concerts or after using personal music devices. The calculator was developed by researchers at NAL to estimate noise exposure risk based on lifestyle habits and to offer simple suggestions on how to optimally manage these risks.

Dr. Elizabeth Beach, a principal NAL researcher whose work has influenced the development of HEARsmart, explained that when assessing the risk of hearing loss risk from loud music, it is important to consider the duration as well as intensity of sound. This is especially relevant for clubbers, as they typically spend a long time at clubs, somewhere between four and seven hours per night. To put this into a wider perspective: the average noise level of a nightclub = 98 decibels; the average time spent in a night club = 5 hours; this level of noise exposure is equivalent to 12 times the daily limit allowed in Australian workplaces! Such exposure over an extended period of time can of course make a significant contribution to the development of a hearing loss or tinnitus in the future.

“One of the key learnings to come from the Know Your Noise Campaign was our ability to successfully engage our target audience by using various different but complementary approaches. Getting our messages out through traditional media, social media and websites that young people hold in high regard, can create an ongoing awareness that we hope, given time, will result in a change in attitude and behaviour around loud sound,” Dr. Beach explained.

The HEARing CRC recently announced a second HEARsmart campaign, co-funded by the Deafness Foundation of Victoria – a pilot study that will help determine how live music venues in Australia can become more “hearing friendly.” The study will work with a small number of live music venues to develop practical and cost-effective solutions to help reduce noise exposure for musicians, patrons and venue staff while maintaining or improving the fidelity of the music being heard.
Concert

“In the coming months, HEARing CRC researchers, will carefully measure noise levels at gigs and gain input from patrons and staff on their experience of sound and their exposure,” said Dr Beach. “The data will then be analysed, the main noise-exposure risks identified, and in consultation with venue owners, a practical noise-reduction package will be developed. While the package will be venue-specific, it will also be adaptable so that, in time, it can be implemented in other similar music venues across Australia.”

The HEARsmart pilot project has the support of Music Victoria who, together with other musician member-based organisations throughout Australia will be asked to encourage uptake of the HEARsmart noise-reduction package in live music venues around Australia. As much of this work is in progress, the final ‘package’ is as yet unknown, but could involve anything from free availability of hearing protection and poster campaigns to encourage use, to venue modifications to reduce reverberation, provision of quieter “chill out” spaces so patrons can take a break, or working with sound engineers to produce music at a safer level, while still being enjoyable to patrons.

For more information about HEARsmart™ go to: hearsmart.org.

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About the authors

Elizabeth Beach, PhD

Dr. Elizabeth Beach is a researcher at the National Acoustic Laboratories (NAL), Sydney Australia and a Project Manager for HEARsmart with the HEARing Cooperative Research Centre (CRC). She has been working in the area of Hearing Loss Prevention since joining NAL in 2009 after completing undergraduate studies in linguistics and psychology at the University of Sydney, and a PhD in Psychology at UWS. Her main area of research is leisure noise, its contribution to overall noise exposure and how it might be affecting our hearing acuity. She has a particular interest in noise exposure in the music and entertainment industries.

Jane Sewell, PhD

Dr. Jane Sewell is the communication and education manager for the HEARing Cooperative Research Centre (CRC) and also a co-Project Manager for the HEARsmart initiative. She has been working with the CRC since 2009, having previously held science communication roles in organisations ranging from The Institute of Cancer Research and the Wellcome Trust in the UK.