Close X
Saturday, November 23, 2024
ADVT 
Life

New Data Shows Young Construction Workers Less Likely To Wear Hearing Protection

Darpan News Desk, 24 Feb, 2017 04:28 PM
    New 2016 data from WorkSafeBC indicates young construction workers are less likely to wear hearing protection at work compared to other age groups in the same industry. In addition, young workers in construction are less likely to wear hearing protection as compared to young workers in other industries, such as manufacturing and primary resources.
     
    Among construction workers age 21 or younger, 24 percent reported not wearing hearing protection as compared to 13 percent of workers over the age of 50 and 11 percent of workers in all other age groups. The data was collected in 2016 from more than 160,000 hearing tests conducted by B.C. employers as part of hearing loss prevention programs.
     
    “Noise-induced hearing loss needs to be taken very seriously,” says Sasha Brown, WorkSafeBC occupational audiologist. “It can be caused by a single exposure to loud noise or more typically by repeated exposures to consistent noise. While the damage may be painless, it is irreversible and may go unnoticed for years or even decades until it reaches a point where it has a significant effect on one’s quality of life.”
     
    According to the Occupational Health and Safety Regulation and Guidelines, employers are required to provide hearing loss prevention programs, monitor noise levels and conduct annual hearing tests for workers exposed to hazardous noise to prevent noise induced hearing loss and permanent hearing damage. All workers are responsible for wearing appropriate hearing protection and to take part in their employer’s hearing loss prevention program. Hazardous noise levels are defined as 85 decibels in the ‘A’ scale for eight hours or the equivalent; the A scale is used for measuring environmental noise.
     
    Hearing loss can go unnoticed by a worker for years or even decades after the initial exposure or series of exposures. Since 2006 there have been more than 37,000 accepted claims for noise-induced hearing-loss in B.C.
     
    “We want to raise the level of awareness among employers of the prevalence and seriousness of this occupational disease, as well as the need to have prevention programs and testing in place, so workers don’t have to live with its debilitating effects for the rest of their lives,” Brown says.

    MORE Life ARTICLES

    What Do Indian Men Expect From Their Dates?

    What Do Indian Men Expect From Their Dates?
    According to a nationwide research conducted by a dating app, 80 percent Indian men would like their dates to sport a red lipstick the first time they meet and prefer them to make the “first move”.

    What Do Indian Men Expect From Their Dates?

    NordströmMatte Public Relations announces official launch after merger

    Anya Nordström of ANPR, and Dani Matte of MOI Management & PR officially announced the m...

    NordströmMatte Public Relations announces official launch after merger

    B.C. writer's essay featured in Elizabeth Gilbert's latest book

    B.C. writer's essay featured in Elizabeth Gilbert's latest book
    An essay by Delta, BC writer Eran Sudds is one of four dozen published in best-selling author Elizabeth Gilbert’s new anthology, Eat Pray Love Made Me Do It: Life Journeys Inspired by the Bestselling Memoir,” (Riverhead Books) which hits bookstores March 29th, 2016.

    B.C. writer's essay featured in Elizabeth Gilbert's latest book

    Review: Madame Butterfly is ‘achingly beautiful’

    Review: Madame Butterfly is ‘achingly beautiful’
    Vancouver Opera did it again, stunning audiences with a gorgeous production of one of the classics: Puccini’s Madama Butterfly.

    Review: Madame Butterfly is ‘achingly beautiful’

    The Young And The Nestless: Helping Millennials With Housing

    The Young And The Nestless: Helping Millennials With Housing
    Chicago native Juan Hernandez fell in love with Hartford while attending Trinity College and decided to stay after graduation. But like many members of the millennial generation, he's learned that affording a place to live can be an expensive proposition.

    The Young And The Nestless: Helping Millennials With Housing

    American Model, TV Host Chrissy Teigen's Choice Of Female Embryo Re-Sparks Sex Selection Debate

    American Model, TV Host Chrissy Teigen's Choice Of Female Embryo Re-Sparks Sex Selection Debate
    The wife of singer-songwriter John Legend told People Magazine she was excited at the thought of seeing her husband with a little girl, adding that he "deserves that bond" and that "a boy will come along."

    American Model, TV Host Chrissy Teigen's Choice Of Female Embryo Re-Sparks Sex Selection Debate