The real dangers of workplace noise

If workers experience standard threshold shifts, employers are required to fit or refit the workers with hearing protectors, train them in the use of the hearing protectors, and require workers to use them. Photo: iStock.com/welcomia
According to the Occupational Safety & Health Administration (OSHA), 22 million employees are exposed each year to hazardous noises at work, making hearing loss the most common work-related injury.
The goal of all employers should be for employees to leave work in the same condition as they arrived: healthy and safe. When an organization displays its dedication to employee safety through responsible practices and initiatives, it results in increased productivity and employee morale, as well as decreased insurance costs.
In 2018, ISO 45001 was established as the new standard for occupational health and safety (OHS) to reduce the burden of regulation and prevent workplace injuries and fatalities, providing a framework to improve employee safety and create safer working conditions. This is an international standard that specifies requirements for an OHS management system, with guidance for its use and to enable an organization to proactively improve its OHS performance in preventing injury and ill-health.
ISO 45001 is intended to be applicable to any organization regardless of its size, type and nature, and all of its requirements are intended to be easily integrated into an organization’s own management processes.
Hazards and risks in the workplace need to be identified and, more importantly, reduced or eliminated to appropriate levels. ISO 45001 highlights both noise and dust exposure issues, as well as the value of workplace monitoring. Research shows that stronger occupational regulation of noise leads to safer sound levels, which results in safer employees.
The risks
The National Institute for Occupational Safety & Health recommends that workers are not exposed to noise levels that amount to more than 85 decibels over eight continuous hours. An estimated 24 percent of hearing loss in the United States has been attributed to workplace exposure, according to the Centers for Disease Control & Prevention.
Although noise-induced hearing loss is one of the most common occupational illnesses, it is often ignored because there are no visible effects. It usually develops over a long period of time and, except in very rare cases, there is no pain. What does occur is a progressive loss of communication, socialization and responsiveness to the environment. In its early stages, noise-induced hearing loss affects the ability to understand or differentiate speech. As it progresses to the lower frequencies, it begins to affect the ability to generally hear sounds.
The primary effects of workplace noise exposure include noise-induced temporary threshold shift, noise-induced permanent threshold shift, acoustic trauma and tinnitus. A noise-induced temporary threshold shift is a short-term decrease in hearing sensitivity that returns to the pre-exposed level in a matter of hours or days, assuming there is not continued exposure to excessive noise.
If noise exposure continues, the shift can become a noise-induced permanent threshold shift, which is a decrease in hearing sensitivity that is not expected to improve over time. If workers experience standard threshold shifts, employers are required to fit or refit workers with hearing protectors, train them in the use of the hearing protectors and require the workers to use them.
The effects of excessive noise exposure are made worse when workers have extended shifts. With extended shifts, the duration of the noise exposure is longer and the amount of time between shifts is shorter. This means the ears have less time to recover between noisy shifts and damage can become permanent.
Tinnitus, or “ringing in the ears,” can occur after long-term exposure to high sound levels, or sometimes from short-term exposure to very high sound levels. Regardless of the cause, this condition is a disturbance produced by the inner ear and interpreted by the brain as sound. Individuals with tinnitus describe it as a hum, buzz, roar, ring or whistle, which can be short term or permanent.
Hazardous levels of noise exposure should be a priority for employers to monitor to avoid implications for both themselves and their employees. Measuring noise levels and noise exposure is the most important part of a workplace hearing conservation and noise control program. It helps identify locations where there are noise problems, employees who may be affected, and where additional noise measurements need to be made.
Potential solutions
To assess the risk of workplace noise, a variety of monitoring solutions can be installed and utilized. Noise dosimeters are ideal for personal exposure monitoring and a mobile workforce, while sound level meters can be used to check areas or an individual’s exposure for a stationary task.
Noise exposures are monitored using technology and are the responsibility of occupational hygienists, a health and safety manager or another trained expert. Data collection provides concrete information highlighting key paths for change and can help an organization achieve compliance with standards and protect its workforce effectively.
To increase the success of workplace noise monitoring, workers must understand its importance and the long-term, negative health effects that could result. Noise-monitoring technology can help capture quantitative data and identify any risks or areas of concern.
Justin Stewart is Casella’s area business manager supporting Casella’s health, safety and environmental boundary-monitoring solutions.