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B U I L D I N G CO N N E C T I O N

S UMM E R 2 0 16

TIPS

A

ccording to figures released by

Australian audiologist Dr Ross

Dineen, who has studied hearing

loss and tinnitus in the construction

industry extensively, construction

workers regularly experience noise

levels up to six times the legal exposure

limit and up to 75% are developing

tinnitus or permanent hearing loss as a

result of their job.

Dineen and his colleagues studied

noise exposure levels in construction

and analysed the way personal

protective equipment (PPE) and

protective approaches are used.

“We measured the real-time

exposure to noise and found the total

dose [of sound] over the working day

averaged over six times the legal

exposure limit. Based on hearing

tests as well as feedback from

family and friends we found that

over 75% of construction workers

were experiencing hearing and

communication problems,”

Dineen said.

Although the original study took

place some years ago, Dineen said

little has changed since his research

and that noise induced hearing loss

(NIHL) and tinnitus remain a serious

issue in construction.

“There’s nothing really being done

to address it,” he said.

Reluctance to wearing PPE is a

major cause of hearing loss in

construction, according to Dineen,

who said that hearing damage was

compounding because as damage

increases, so too does reluctance to

HEAR TODAY, GONE TOMORROW

Anyone who’s ever completed

an induction knows workers

should be wearing personal

protective equipment when

on site. But according to

audiologist

Ross Dineen,

rates of hearing damage are

still alarmingly high in the

construction industry.