|
Hearing conservation is an important
aspect of the overall safety and health
program. OSHA's Regulation
(Standards - 29 CFR) Occupational noise
exposure. - 1910.95, is designed to
protect workers with significant
occupational noise exposures from
suffering material hearing impairment.
OSHA requires all
employers with employees exposed to
noise above the action level of 85 dBA
(averaged over an eight-hour work shift)
to develop a formal hearing conservation
program including the following
elements:
·
Noise Monitoring
·
Audiometric Testing
·
Audiogram Evaluation
·
Hearing Protectors
·
Training
·
Recordkeeping
The following
Internet resources provide guidelines
for establishing a hearing conservation
program, and contain important updates
about related recordkeeping provisions.
Government
Resources
A one-stop OSHA
page this lists resources for
recognition of noise hazards, evaluation
methods, controls, compliance standards,
and OSHA directives.
http://www.osha-slc.gov/SLTC/noisehearingconservation/
This information
booklet by OSHA is on occupational noise
and provides a generic, non-exhaustive
overview of the OSHA hearing
conservation program.
http://www.osha-slc.gov/Publications/osha3074.html
This link is
OSHA's Occupational Noise Regulation
(Standards - 29 CFR)
Occupational noise exposure. - 1910.95
http://www.oshaslc.gov/pls/oshaweb/owadisp.show_document?
p_table=STANDARDS&p_id=9735
Recent
Update-- This link
provides the final rule regarding OSHA's
hearing loss recording provisions of the
Occupational Injury and Illness
Recording and Reporting Requirements
rule published January 19, 2001 (66 FR
5916-6135), scheduled to take effect on
January 1, 2003 (66 FR 52031-52034).
http://www.osha.gov/pls/oshaweb/owadisp.show_document?
p_table=FEDERAL_REGISTER&p_id=17313&p_text_version=FALSE
This is a handy
checklist by NIOSH to evaluate your
hearing conservation program.
http://www.cdc.gov/niosh/hpprgmch.html
This document
summarizes a series of investigations
conducted through NIOSH's Health Hazard
Evaluation program.
http://www.cdc.gov/niosh/99-106pd.html
?
This site
provides information about the
environmental noise-related activities
of CDC's National Center for
Environmental Health (NCEH) and provides
links to other CDC programs and to non-CDC
organizations that address the health
effects of noise.
http://www.cdc.gov/nceh/hsb/noise/
Public/Private
Resources
A handy sample of
hearing conservation program by the
University of Colorado . This
document works as a template that allows
you to customize the program per your
company/organization.
http://www.bernardino.colostate.edu/OHSS/OHSSHandouts/
ohss_SampHearingCons_Program.pdf
The Noise
Pollution Clearinghouse is a national
non-profit organization with extensive
online noise related resources. The
Noise Pollution Clearinghouse seeks to:
raise awareness about noise pollution,
create, collect, and distribute
information and resources regarding
noise pollution, strengthen laws and
governmental efforts to control noise
pollution, establish networks among
environmental, professional, medical,
governmental.
http://www.nonoise.org/
This site from
the workers' compensation board of
British Columbia provides information
about hearing conservation and noise
control for workers and employers. This
site is continually being updated.
http://hearingconservation.healthandsafetycentre.org/s/Home.asp
This booklet is a
collaborative effort between the
National Safety Council and NIOSH, and
offers general guidance to workers about
protecting their hearing.
http://www.nsc.org/pubs/sw.htm
?
This site
contains publications, educational
materials, lists of related web site and
plenty of training materials associated
with hearing conservation and hearing
loss prevention. The site is authored by
the National Hearing Conservation
Association, the only national
organization dedicated to prevent
hearing loss due to noise and other
environmental factors in all sectors of
society. http://www.hearingconservation.org/
This article is
designed to provide you with the
resources you need to maintain or
develop a reliable hearing conservation
program. Save this article in your
hearing conservation or safety folder so
that you can have quick access to
numerous resources when developing,
updating, revising or evaluating your
plan.
Endnotes
[1]
Frank R. Number of workers exposed
to occupational noise. Seminars in
Hearing 1988; 9:287-97
[2]
US Department of Labor-Occupational
Safety and Health Administration.
Occupational noise exposure:
hearing conservation amendment.
Fed Register 1981; 46:4078-179.
[3]
Dobie RA. Noise In: Physical
and Biological Hazards of the Workplace ,
Edited by Peter H. Wald and Gregg M.
Stave, Second Edition, 2002; 17:279-290
|