Stories from the Field
Whistles May Harm Hearing, Study Shows
By UmpireHockey.com
Feb 26, 2013 - 8:33:35 PM

As a basketball referee in his spare time, Nathan Williams thought the whistles were unnecessarily loud. At one all-day high school tournament, he wore a dosimeter that measured his noise exposure. The tournament "maxed out the device," Williams said. In conversation, his fellow officials joked about their hearing loss, sometimes known as referee's ear. Williams, then a graduate student in audiology, did not see the humor. A study recently done by Williams and his professor Gregory Flamme shows that referees were much more likely to report symptoms of ringing in the ears and trouble hearing than people of the same age in the general population. Read the article in The New York Times by JOYCE COHEN (click here).

The study, "Sports Officials' Hearing Status: Whistle Use as a Factor Contributing to Hearing Trouble," was published in January (2013) in The Journal of Occupational and Environmental Hygiene.

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