4.6 Article

Health Effects of Occupational Noise

Journal

CURRENT POLLUTION REPORTS
Volume 7, Issue 3, Pages 344-358

Publisher

SPRINGER HEIDELBERG
DOI: 10.1007/s40726-021-00194-4

Keywords

Occupational noise; Noise-induced hearing loss; Hypertension; Cardiovascular disease; Environmental noise

Funding

  1. Projekt DEAL

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Workplace noise has negative impacts on health, particularly in terms of inducing hearing loss and cardiovascular diseases. Recent studies have found associations between occupational noise exposure and conditions such as hypertension and ischemic heart disease. Further research is needed to better understand the non-auditory effects of noise and to develop effective measures for noise reduction in the workplace.
Purpose of Review Workplace noise negatively impacts health, and noise-induced hearing loss is the most common work-related disease in many countries. Occupational noise may also cause cardiovascular disease, and there is epidemiologic evidence on the non-auditory effects of noise. This paper aims to briefly present and summarize the latest evidence on the auditory and non-auditory health effects of occupational noise exposure from the last 5 years. Recent Findings Two systematic reviews assessing the cardiovascular effects of occupational noise exposure were published in the last year. Our own recent review found convincing evidence of an association between occupational noise exposure > 80 dB(A) and hypertension and a dose-response relationship between noise exposure and hypertension risk. Another review of cardiovascular disease conducted by the World Health Organization (WHO) and the International Labour Organization (ILO) found an increased risk of incident ischemic heart disease at noise exposures >= 85 dB(A). Recent reviews on work-related injuries, diabetes, acoustic neuroma, and pregnancy outcomes also find noise-related associations. Evidence of an association between occupational noise and cardiovascular outcomes was recently evaluated. We found the risk of hypertension increases with a clear dose-response relationship at noise levels > 80 dB(A). The WHO/ILO review highlights the lack of quality research including women. Additional high-quality research on epigenetic effects, oxidative stress, work-related injuries, diabetes, acoustic neuroma, and pregnancy outcomes is also needed. Urgently needed (increased) measures of workplace noise reduction will reduce the incidence of noise-induced hearing loss and help prevent cardiovascular diseases, especially hypertension.

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