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Auditory lifestyles and beliefs related to hearing loss among college students in the USA.

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TLDR
In this article, the authors evaluated the auditory life styles and beliefs of college students with reference to exposure to loud sounds in the context of the health belief model and found that 44% of the students use noisy equipment without ear protection and 29% (69/238) of students work in noisy environments.
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Teenage Use of Portable Listening Devices: A Hazard to Hearing?

TL;DR: The output levels of PLDs are capable of reaching levels that could increase the risk for MIHL, and 14% of teenagers in this study reported behavior that puts them at increased risk for hearing loss.
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Motivation and Acceptability Norms of Human-Caused Sound in Muir Woods National Monument

TL;DR: The authors used a dose-response methodology to predict the acceptability of sound, natural or human-caused, at Muir Woods National Monument, and found that acceptance of sound varied by an individual's motivation for quiet.
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Evidence of hearing loss in a “normally-hearing” college-student population

TL;DR: There was a statistically reliable relationship in which personal music player use was correlated with decreased hearing status in male subjects and routine screening and education regarding hearing loss risk factors are critical as college students do not always self-identify early changes in hearing.
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Preferred listening levels of personal listening devices in young teenagers: Self reports and physical measurements

TL;DR: More than 25% of the participants in the noisy condition were found to be at risk according to occupational damage risk criteria NIOSH, 1998, which indicated low awareness towards loud music listening consequences.
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The effects of a hearing education program on recreational noise exposure, attitudes and beliefs toward noise, hearing loss, and hearing protector devices in young adults

TL;DR: There was a significant decrease in recreational noise exposure and several (sub) scales of YANS and BAHPHL between both the sessions, which resulted in a more frequent use of HPDs in 12% of the participants, however, the behavioral change was not completely related to the knowledge of young adults′ individual hearing status.
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