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Despite loud music, baby boomers get good news from hearing study

Published on January 27, 2010
Published on February 24, 2010
The Associated Press ~ staff The News  RSS Feed
Topics :
University of Wisconsin-Madison , American Journal , State University of New York Downstate Medical Center , NEW YORK , Beaver Dam , Brooklyn

NEW YORK - Sweet news for baby boomers: Despite all those warnings that loud rock music would damage their ears, their generation appears to have better hearing than their parents did.
In fact, a new study suggests that the rate of hearing problems at ages ranging from 45 to 75 has been dropping for years, at least among white Americans.
"I'm less likely to have a hearing loss when I get to be 70 years old than my grandmother did when she was 70," said Karen Cruickshanks of the University of Wisconsin-Madison.
She's an author of the study - and a member of the post-Second World War "baby boom" generation who remembers her mother scolding her for listening to loud music.
Apart from giving her generation some satisfaction, the new work implies that what people do and experience may help them prevent or delay hearing loss as they get older. Experts theorize there may be several reasons for the finding, like fewer very noisy jobs and better ear protection at worksites, immunizations and antibiotics that prevented certain diseases, and maybe even a decline in smoking.
Experts praised the work, but agreed that scientists now must see if the pattern holds up outside of its largely white participants. They also said the result doesn't mean it's safe to blast loud music into your ears from an iPod for hours on end.
Cruickshanks, colleague Weihai Zhan and others reported their work recently in the American Journal of Epidemiology.
They analyzed the results of hearing tests given to about 5,300 people who were at least 45 years old and born between 1902 and 1962. The tests were done between 1993 and 2008, and many participants were tested at five-year intervals. Participants were residents of Beaver Dam, Wis., and their sons and daughters, who lived in a variety of places.
The researchers noted how many tests showed at least mild hearing loss. Then they looked to see if the rate of impairment at given ages was affected by when the person was born.
For example, take the results for men in their early 60s. The impairment rate was 58 per cent for men born between 1930 and 1934. For men born just five years later, the rate was about 50 per cent. And for men born between 1945 and 1949, the oldest baby boomers, the rate was only about 36 per cent.
Overall, for a given age group, men showed on average a 13 per cent drop in the risk of impairment for every five-year increase in the date of their birth. For women, the decrease was about six per cent.
The researchers are now trying to uncover reasons for the decline. Cruickshanks said the explanation will probably be complex and hard to pin down because the pattern has been going on for decades.
The study is "very impressive," said Elizabeth Helzner, an epidemiologist who studies age-related hearing loss at the State University of New York Downstate Medical Center in Brooklyn.
The findings make sense in light of declines in long-term exposure to loud noise without ear protection in the workplace and perhaps in hunting and battle, she said. Those exposures would have happened more to men than women, which would help explain why the results were more dramatic in men, she said.
Another possible factor is better control of diabetes and heart disease, both of which are linked to hearing loss, she said.
Now the question is whether the decline will continue with today's young people, who often play loud music in their earbuds for hours at a time, day after day, she said. That chronic exposure may prove more hazardous than the briefer bouts baby boomers had, she said.

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