How Headphones, Earbuds Can Slowly Harm Your Hearing Over Time

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It’s not just about the volume. The length of time you spend each day listening to devices through your headphones or earbuds can also contribute to hearing loss later in life. Kilito Chan/Getty Images
  • Headphones and earbuds can impact hearing loss in children and young adults as they age.
  • Children, teenagers, and young adults listen to many hours of music per day at volumes exceeding the globally recommended public health limit.
  • There are ways to set healthy noise limits and protect your hearing.

Cranking up your earbuds as you listen to music or a podcast might be your favorite form of self-care.

However, it might not be the best for your hearing.

According to recent analysis, high levels of noise can affect hearing loss in the future.

Children, teens, and young adults may be particularly at risk if they often listen to many hours of music per day at volumes exceeding the public health limit of 70 decibels of average leisure noise exposure per day that’s recommended by The National Institutes of Health (NIH).

The World Health Organization (WHO) estimates that around 50 percent of people ages 12 to 35 are at risk of hearing loss due to prolonged and excessive exposure to loud sounds, such as music heard through personal audio devices.

“I think on a broader level, the medical and audiology communities, as well as the general public, don’t understand that significant hearing loss is not part of normal healthy aging, but largely represents noise-induced hearing loss,” Dr. Daniel Fink, board chair of the Quiet Coalition, told Healthline.

He compares this misunderstanding to the misconception that deep wrinkles and skin pigmentation are part of normal aging, whereas they largely represent solar or UV damage.

“Similarly, without exposure to loud noise, we should be able to hear well into old age, something generally not true in industrialized societies,” said Fink.

Source: healthline