Hearing
difficulties put farmers at greater risk for injury
Newswise — Hearing loss puts
farmers at higher risk for suffering an injury at
work, according to a new University of Iowa study
that was released at the National Hearing
Conservation Association’s 32nd annual conference.
A team led by Dr. Nancy Sprince
of the University of Iowa College of Public Health
had farmers perform self assessments of their
hearing to assess a correlation between hearing loss
in farmers and occupational injury.
The study’s participants were
pulled from the larger Agricultural Health Study
that included 30,000 Iowa farmers. Of those, 7,000
were randomly selected to participate, and after a
screening, 431 were chosen for the case group and
473 for the control group. The case group was made
up of farmers who said they had been injured on the
job in the past year, and the control group said
they had not been.
They were asked whether they
had difficulty hearing normal conversation even with
a hearing aid. The farmers who had difficulty
hearing normal conversation were shown to be 80
percent more likely to suffer an injury related to a
fall on the farm. Wearing a hearing aid was shown to
have the highest correlation to work-related injury.
Hearing aid-wearers were 2.4 times as likely to be
injured on the job, and they were 5.4 times more
likely to suffer an animal-related injury, like
falling off a horse, and 4.4 times more likely to
suffer a machinery-related injury. Other risk
factors found to be associated with greater injury
include working 50 or more hours a week on a farm,
having large livestock on the farm, and taking
medication regularly.
This is important because
farmers have been shown to be at a higher risk for
hearing loss than other American workers. The loud
conditions on farms created by tractors, combines,
grain dryers, chainsaws, livestock and other things
create a hazardous work environment that can lead to
noise-induced hearing loss. Compounding the problem
is that hearing protection is not always worn.
Hearing aids help restore some of the farmers’
auditory abilities, but the best situation is for
them to retain as much of their natural hearing
ability as possible.
Previous studies have
established farms are dangerous work environments. A
2005 study found farmers are eight times more likely
to suffer a fatal occupational injury than the
average American worker and twice as likely to
suffer a non-fatal occupational injury.
Sprince will advocate the
prevention of agricultural injuries by controlling
the noise exposure that leads to hearing loss. This
includes more widespread and appropriate use of
hearing protection.
“In many cases it is difficult
to engineer out noise on the farm, so farmers have
to rely on personal protective equipment,” Sprince
said. “And too often they are unaware of the tasks
that require hearing protection.”