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Kids' Use of Earbuds Worries Hearing Experts

Lunchtime in the cafeteria at Smith Leadership Academy in Boston is a noisy affair; grabbing their trays and yelling to their friends, the 200 middle-schoolers are deafening.

Suddenly, a young science teacher commands the room's attention:

"If you can hear me, clap once," he says.

There's a thundering clap.

"If you can hear me, clap twice."

Two more thundering claps.

The young teacher is David Fassler. He suffers from hearing loss — possibly from the heavy metal concerts he attended in his youth. He has arranged a special appearance by Dr. Sharon Kujawa of the Massachusetts Eye and Ear Infirmary. She is here to convince these middle-schoolers that too much noise can be bad for them.

"Every single day in our clinics," Kujawa tells the kids, "we see people with permanent hearing loss from exposure to loud sounds."

Kujawa starts her physiology-of-the-ear lecture. Slides show the snail-shaped cochlea, the inner ear chamber where hearing happens. Each of the paired cochlea are lined with 16,000 little hair cells that vibrate at different sound frequencies. Those vibrations get translated into nerve signals and sound perception.

But loud noise can damage the sensitive cells — or even kill them.

How loud is too loud? Kujawa brings her own sound effects: She shows that regular speech registers at about 60 decibels on the sound meter. A lawn mower registers at 90 decibels. Finally, a chain saw is over 100 decibels. That's in the danger zone. Less than a half-hour of that can do damage.

What about the lunchroom noise? Kujawa calls on Akeema Charles and Tyrell Pugh, two eighth-graders who earlier helped her measure the cafeteria's decibel levels.

"We got 89.2, 88.6 and then 89.8," Charles reports.

"That's pretty loud, you guys," Kujawa says. Then she launches into her main message, about personal stereo players.

"The reason they're potentially dangerous," she says, "is because you take that little earbud and you put it down your [ear] canal, and you're this far from the source of the sound now."

She holds her fingers about a half-inch apart.

To drive the point home, Kujawa introduces Ben Jackson, a cool-looking, twenty-something guy. He immediately captures the kids' attention as he launches into a rap called "Turn it to the Left":

When he ends, the kids go wild. They're impressed.

Jackson is part of Kujawa's team for personal reasons. His father Isaiah, who is looking on from the back of the cafeteria, is a classical musician — a conductor — who lost much of his hearing a few years ago. The reason is unknown.

This is why Jackson works hard to get kids to understand what is at stake. During the question-and-answer period, he lays it on the line in terms they can understand:

"If you shave all the hair off your head and wait six months, what happens?" Jackson asks.

"It grows back," the kids yell.

"Exactly," Jackson says. "Now, the reason that your ears are different — and it's crucial that you remember this — is, when you damage your ears, they don't heal. They never get better, they just get worse — slowly or quickly — throughout your life."

Two-hundred middle-schoolers are completely silent as Jackson asks: "You want to be able to keep listening to music, don't ya?"

Scientists are paying attention to what is happening to kids' hearing, too. Six years ago, researchers at the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention reported noise-induced hearing loss in nearly 13 percent of Americans between six and 19. Kujawa says that translates to more than 5 million young people.

"To have a statistic like that certainly raised many, many red flags," she says.

Some experts don't accept the way CDC researchers measured hearing loss. But even critics of that study worry about noise levels that kids are living with these days.

In her research, Kujawa exposed young animals to loud noise. She found that they had accelerated hearing loss later in life, even without further noise exposure.

Scientists have measured sound levels from MP3 players. At 70 percent of volume, they pump out 85 decibels — about the same as the school cafeteria.

After lunch, Akeem Charles, the eighth-grader who helped Kujawa measure noise levels, plugs in her earbuds. The music from her iPod can be heard from several feet away.

Charles says she listens to her iPod a couple of hours every day. After she turns it off, she sometimes hears "big time" ringing in her ears.

"But ... I don't know, I just like music. I can't help it," she says.

Kujawa tells the kids that ringing in the ears is a sign of imminent ear damage. It means that it's time to cut back on listening time and turn the volume to the left.

Or, as Ben Jackson raps, "It ain't no fun man, it ain't no fun, when you're 13 years old and your ears are 81."

Copyright 2023 NPR. To see more, visit https://www.npr.org.

Richard Knox
Since he joined NPR in 2000, Knox has covered a broad range of issues and events in public health, medicine, and science. His reports can be heard on NPR's Morning Edition, All Things Considered, Weekend Edition, Talk of the Nation, and newscasts.
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