REGISTER   |   SUBSCRIBE   |   E-MAIL ALERTS   |   HELP |   SIGN OUT    

Home   |   Print edition   |   Advertising  |   Buyers Guide   |   Jobs   |   Events calendar   |   RSS feeds
  • Table of contents
  • Past issues

yellow star Featured Jobs

  • Search jobs
  • Post jobs
issues and events

Aerobics Acoustics Can Harm Hearing

October 2003, page 36

Working out at a gym may improve your muscle tone, but both the staff and exercise participants could damage their ears from the loud music, says physicist Eugenie Mielczarek of George Mason University in Fairfax, Virginia. Over the past three years, Mielczarek measured sound levels in aerobics and other exercise classes at three fitness clubs in Fairfax County. At some clubs, sound levels reached 120 decibels, "close to that of using a jackhammer," she says.

CREDIT: EUGENIE MIELCZAREK
Loud music at fitness clubs
may destroy your hearing,
says physicist Eugenie
Mielczarek (above).
Regular exposure to loud music slowly destroys the delicate hair cells inside the ear, which reduces the volume and frequency of information transmitted to the brain. Since 1991, the American Council on Exercise (ACE) has published noise level guidelines for its members, but few instructors follow them. The guidelines, based on recommendations by the Occupational Safety and Health Administration, limit noise levels over an eight-hour period to under 85 dB--the equivalent of noise from heavy traffic. But some national fitness club chains hold 45-minute-long classes at 110 dB, says Mielczarek, and most instructors teach six to eight classes each day. "The club staff were either unaware that [ACE] guidelines existed or asked me to leave the class when I asked them to turn the sound down," she adds.

But the volume may soon be turned down for a different reason, says Cedric Bryant, ACE's chief exercise physiologist. "We've been finding that a lot of instructors are suffering voice damage from shouting over the music," he says.

Paul Guinnessy

  • Article Tools
  • Enlarge text   Enlarge text
  • Shrink text   Shrink text
  • Printer-friendly formatPrinter-friendly format
  • Download PDFDownload PDF
  • E-mail this articleE-mail this article
  • Comment on this articleWrite a letter to the editor
  • Free this month
  • Benjamin Franklin, Civic Scientist
  • Applying Physics and the Law
  • Aerobics Acoustics Can Harm Hearing
  • US Team Grabs Top Honors at Physics Olympiad
  • New Books
  • Letters
  • Most popular articles
  • Month-long calculation resolves an 82-year-old quantum paradox
    September 2009
  • Friction, force chains, and falling fruit
    September 2009
  • US electricity grid still vulnerable to electromagnetic pulses
    September 2009
  • A ghost image violates a Bell inequality
    August 2009
  • Request product info

     

     


    SERVICES
    Physics Today Jobs
    Physics Today Buyers Guide
    Research Today
    NEWS
    News Picks
    We Hear That Society News
    Event Calendar
    Obituaries
    THE MAGAZINE
    This month in print
    Past Issues
    Institutional subscriptions
    Information for advertsers
    READER SERVICE
    Register
    Sign in
    Subscribe
    Email alert
    MORE INFO
    Contact us
    About Physics Today
    Privacy Policy
    Terms & Conditions
    Copyright © 2009 by the American Institute of Physics - All rights reserved