
Public
release date: 10-Mar-2009
[ | E-mail Article ]
Contact: Sylvain-Jacques Desjardins
sylvain-jacques.desjardins@umontreal.ca
514-343-7593
University of Montreal
This release is available in
French.
The majority of the 650,000 employees from
Quebec's manufacturing sector – specifically those working in metallurgy and
sawmilling – are exposed to noise levels that exceed governmental norms.
According to a new study from the Université
de Montréal, the Université Laval and the Institut national de santé
publique du Québec, extra workplace decibels increase the risks of both
work-related accidents and road collisions. The findings will be reported in
three journals: Occupation Environmental Medicine, Accident
Analysis and Prevention and Traffic Injury Prevention.
The researchers studied a sample of 53,000
workers. "More than 60 percent were exposed to noises exceeding the norm of
90 decibels (dB) per day, which is equivalent to the sounds that emanate
when a subway enters a station," says Michel Picard, a professor at the
Université de Montréal's School of Speech Therapy and Audiology, who
conducted the study along with his colleague Tony Leroux.
Quebec has not revised its workplace noise
norms in close to 40 years. Throughout North America, including other
Canadian provinces, the norm is set at 85 dB. This is a clear indication
that Quebec is lax when it comes to noise in the work environment.
When a worker is exposed to noise exceeding 90
dB during a day's work, that worker is 6.2 percent more likely to have a
work accident than colleagues working in the same environment with less
noise. If the worker suffers hearing loss, his risk of injury is 7 percent
greater.
Out of 43,250 reported work accidents, 5,287
were associated to noise. "What is particularly worrying is the young age of
the workers," says Picard. The average individual was a 36-year-old male
exposed to the noise for 13 years. And these hearing losses are permanent.
The researchers also focused on the driving
records of workers exposed to noise in the workplace. By cross-referencing
with data from the Société de l'assurance automobile du Québec they analyzed
46,000 men who were exposed to more than 100dB in their workplace.
The risk of an accident increases by 6 percent
for those who still have good hearing. However, the risk increases to 31
percent for workers who suffered important hearing losses. These are not
minor car accidents, but serious collisions.
According to Picard, this new study clearly
indicates that workplace noise levels are a problem neglected by
authorities. "Technology exists to reduce noise in the workplace,"
stressesPicard. "All that's missing is the political will."
###
On the Web:
About the Université de Montréal:
www.umontreal.ca/english/index.htm
English adaptation by Marc Tulin; original French story by Mathieu-Robert
Sauvé can be consulted at
http://www.nouvelles.umontreal.ca/recherche/sciences-de-la-sante/le-travail-rend-sourd.html.
[
| E-mail Article ]