Have you had a hearing test?


I'm 49 years old and work on cars for a living so I'm exposed to noisy air tools, engines, grinders and other loud noises. Plus I spend about three hours a day listening to my stereo system with the average level in the 80db range, sometimes louder when the mood strikes. The other day, a customer came in and requested I take a test drive with him to listen for a "jingle bell" noise emanating from under his car and once under way he remarked "there it is, do you hear it" and I told him I didn't hear anything that sounded like a "jingle bell" noise. My service advisor then rode with him and he told me he could hear the noise but not identify it. So, my 30 year old service advisor could hear the noise but not golden eared me, hmmm. I decided the best course of action would be to have my hearing tested. I checked in the yellow pages and found to my surprise that there were many centers that offered free hearing tests. Yep, absolutely free. The test took about 40 minutes of my time including filling out the questionaire and personal information forms. The results for me were better than I expected. I do have slight high frequency loss but excellent hearing up to the 2K range on the Audiometry test. I checked some sites on the web under the topic "hearing test results" and found I'm in pretty good shape for my age group. Almost all men my age will exhibit some loss but I wanted to establish a benchmark now so that I can take the exam again in a year and monitor any changes. I will definitely be more aware of sheltering my ears from loud damaging noises since I have already experienced some hearing loss. I also found a chart on the web that indicated the maximum recommended time exposure to certain db levels which was very informative. The 95db max was two hours, so if you are going to crank up the tunes, keep it short. I would recommend all you Hi End enthusiasts get your free test and establish a base line, even if you are not forty.
rhljazz

Showing 1 response by ejlif

I did the same thing as I was always feeling bothered that I was hearing a little less out of the right ear. I felt a constant nag of worrying that the balance was slightly tilted to the left. My hearing test showed that I had 100% in the left and 96% in the right. The audiologist said that was considered 100% overall, but that maybe I was noticing that very slight reduction in the right. I think I was really starting to become a hypocondriach over it, but after getting the test and finding out everything was OK, it helped me to stop worrying about it so much.

It really is a good idea to get a hearing test to get a benchmark of where your hearing is at so that if it does decline you will know how much.

A great thing to have done is custom ear mold ear plugs. They are so much more comfortable than the foam ones. I regularly wear mine almost all day in noisy work situations and when I pull them out at the end of the day my ears feel refreshed and crisp. You can get vented ones that knock of 20db, you can still hear most things clearly and still protect your ears from sudden loud noises that unexpedetly occur. You can get the hearing test and the molds done all in one stop at most hearing centers