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>> Auditory Hazards of Airbags
Auditory Hazards of Air Bags
March 27, 1997
Dr. Ricardo Martinez, Director
National Highway Traffic Safety Administration (NHTSA)
400 7th Ave. SW
Washington, DC 20590
Dear Dr. Martinez:
As the President of the National Hearing Conservation Association
(NHCA), I am writing to you about the problems created by the
government mandate requiring air bags to be installed in all
new U. S. automobiles. Although we are sensitive to the fact
that airbags have saved approximately 1500 lives, that is only
part of the story. As the President of an association whose
mission is the prevention of hearing loss due to noise and other
environmental factors, I urge you to reconsider your position.
The NHCA is an organization of professionals who share a common
goal - the prevention of noise-induced hearing loss. The Association
is composed of audiologists, physicians, industrial hygienists,
safety specialists, engineers and scientists, occupational health
nurses, equipment manufacturers, and others, all of whom are
concerned with the prevention of hearing loss for the 30+ million
Americans who are exposed to hazardous noise at work. NHCAs
interests extend to all situations in which hazardous noise
exists, whether occupational settings in industry, construction,
farming, or the armed forces. As well, NHCA is interested in
preventing noise-induced hearing loss in non-occupational applications
in the consumer and recreational sectors.
Although it is true that airbags can save lives, data as reported
on the NHTSA web page indicate that approximately 60 lives have
been lost due to airbag deployments. It does seem tragic indeed
that drivers have no choice about whether they put a potentially
lethal device in their cars, when alternatives such as lap and
shoulder belts exist and are finding increasing use among the
public. This does not even take into account the facts that
we are writing you about at this time, which concern cases of
hearing loss, hyperacusis, and tinnitus, that arise from being
exposed to the noise of airbag deployments.
Because we live in such a visual world, many of us take our
hearing for granted. We are not aware of the impact that hearing
disorders can have on our lives and our loved ones until it
is too late. Hyperacusis is one of the rare ailments that few
of us have even become aware of. It is an extreme sensitivity
to sound which causes many of those afflicted to be unable to
function in society or to leave their homes. Virtually all sounds
are painful. Hearing protection must be worn to even leave the
house, and the most effective of hearing protectors are sometimes
inadequate to provide relief. The underlying physiological processes
of hyperacusis are unknown, but exposure to loud and/or impulsive
noises has been implicated as a cause in many reported cases,
and some of those cases have been attributed to airbags.
Tinnitus, another auditory disorder that is often due to exposure
to sudden and very loud sounds, can be equally as onerous in
its effects. Tinnitus is the technical term for head noises,
such as ringing, hissing, humming, or buzzing in the ears, that
occur in the absence of actual sounds in the environment. Imagine
if you will a visual analog - a bright red dot in the middle
of your visual field. It never, ever, goes away, whether your
eyes are open or shut, whether you are looking in illuminated
rooms or in the dark. The only way to cover it up is to look
into daylight so bright that it is uncomfortable. For those
afflicted with serious and unremitting tinnitus, the experience
may be similar. The tinnitus also never goes away. Concentration
and sleep can become difficult. When it is oppressive enough,
tinnitus sufferers will sometimes resort to broadcasting loud
sounds into their ears to cover it up. Hardly a desirable solution,
but often the only one available.
Because airbags have been designed to fully protect average-weight
adult males in 30 mph frontal collisions, the sound levels created
by airbags are so high (about the same as a howitzer going off
in the car) that they can cause permanent hearing loss, and
the onset of hyperacusis and tinnitus in noise-sensitive individuals.
This was recently reported by Dr. Richard Price of the U. S.
Army at the Spring Meeting of the Acoustical Society of America.
His findings are based upon experiments with anesthetized cats
as well as an advanced theoretical model of the ear. [G. Richard
Price (1996). "Hearing Hazard from the Noise of Air Bag
Deployment," J. Acoustical Society of America 99(4, Pt.
2), p. 2464.]. Thus, even though the airbag may save a life
in an accident, it can cause other problems. Furthermore, regardless
of how over-designed and safe airbag systems are, there will
be unnecessary and/or accidental deployments that may cause
needless auditory or other physical injury to those riding in
the car.
In addition to the scientific data cited above, there are numerous
anecdotal reports that have come to our attention, from articles
in Tinnitus Today and Hyperacusis Newsletter, and from conversations
with those afflicted with horrible and debilitating auditory
disorders arising from exposure to airbag deployments. This
is all the more tragic since these persons had no warning, no
choice, and no option - they were victims of a bureaucratic
mandate that removed from them the personal decision to disable
the airbags and to use an effective and safer alternative method
of protection, namely safety belts.
Of course, besides the auditory issues cited above, airbags
can and do cause ocular damage in children and others as reported
earlier this year in USA Today ("Big Three Lobby for Safer
Air Bags," Aug. 26, 1996, p. 4B).
Additionally, those who sit close to the steering wheel or
who may drive with their wrists and elbows on the steering wheel
between their body and the wheel, are especially susceptible
to airbag injuries. And, please recall that bags are only effective
in a limited percentage of crashes, namely frontal impacts.
With this in mind, we join other professional organizations
such as the American Academy of Otolaryngology - Head and Neck
Surgery (AAO/HNS) in petitioning you to not just allow deactivation
of driver and passenger airbags at the purchasers choosing,
and to explore designing airbags that deploy with less force
and less noise, but more importantly you must require the installation
of on/off switches so that drivers and passengers can easily
make the choice. Otherwise, how are concerned individuals to
deal with the situations arising when driving rental cars or
riding in a friends vehicle? Furthermore, all airbag-equipped
cars should come with warning labels about the potential harmful
effects from the blast of deployment.
For all of the above reasons, I urge you to modify the air
bag requirements for American automobiles. It is simply unjust
to require countless others to continue to experience hearing
and other disabilities from future airbag deployments when they
should have the option to choose less hazardous alternatives
for their protection.
Sincerely,
Mary M. McDaniel, MS, CCC-A
President, National Hearing Conservation Association
cc:
James Hall, Chairman, NTSB
Brian O'Neil, President, Insurance Inst. for Highway Safety
Robert Lang, Director Safety and Engineering, GM
Helen Petrauskas, VP Environmental and Safety Engineering, Ford
Rhoda Karpatkin, President, Consumer Reports
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