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  • 6
    Mar
    2013
    3:50pm, EST

    2 Loud Crew? Bloomberg targets NYC teens who blast music through their ear buds

    Jonathan Ernst / Reuters file

    New York Mayor Michael Bloomberg, pictured in January at the U.S. Conference of Mayors winter meeting in Washington, has taken on numerous dietary habits he considers unhealthy.

    By M. Alex Johnson, staff writer, NBC News

    New York Mayor Michael Bloomberg — who banned 16-ounce sodas, trans fats in restaurants and public smoking — has a new bug in his ear: young people who play their music too loud through their headphones.

    The city's spending a quarter-million dollars to launch a Hearing Loss Prevention Media Campaign warning young people through social media and focus groups about the risk of losing their hearing, The New York Post reported Wednesday.


    "With public and private support, a public education campaign is being developed to raise awareness about safe use of personal music players ... and risks of loud and long listening," Nancy Clark, the city Health Department's assistant commissioner of environmental disease prevention, told The Post.

    Researchers at Harvard-affiliated Brigham and Women's Hospital in Boston reported in 2010 that nearly 1 in 5 Americans ages 12 to 19 have lost some of their hearing.

    Read the top health news on NBCNews.com


    Follow @NBCNewsUS

    The researchers didn't single out portable music devices, but cited a 2010 Australian study that linked them with a 70 percent increased risk of hearing loss in children.

    Bloomberg has won a reputation for trying to ban things he considers unhealthy. Just last month, he proposed banning Styrofoam because it clogs landfills and might be harmful.

    Other things and activities Bloomberg has banned since he was elected in 2001 include:

    • Smoking in bars and restaurants.
    • Trans fats, the artificial fats used to cook french fries and other greasy treats, which doctors consider the most dangerous saturated fat.
    • Menu boards that don't include calorie counts.
    • And most famously, soft drinks larger than 16 ounces.

    Follow M. Alex Johnson on Twitter and Facebook.

    Related: 
    Q&A: How loud is too loud?

    860 comments

    Quick review: He took salt shakers off the table in restaurants. He took "Big Gulp" cups of soda away too. He was instrumental in upping the price of tobacco products with higher taxes. He wants to take your guns. When did we ask this Dork to be our Nanny? Lets give him a sex change, sign him up in  …

    Show more
    Explore related topics: new-york, health, michael-bloomberg, noise, ipods, featured
  • 17
    Jan
    2012
    5:51pm, EST

    Fatal distraction: Deaths of headphone-wearing pedestrians on the rise

    By Sevil Omer, msnbc.com

    Anna Marie Stickel never heard the train coming. The 14-year-old was listening to music on her iPod while walking along the railroad track, taking a shortcut to school after missing the morning bus.

    An Amtrak train traveling south along the stretch of track in Maryland's Middle River struck her from behind, instantly killing the high school freshman on Jan. 5, 2010.

    Anna's tragic story sparked a national study examining the dangers associated with pedestrian use of headphones, according to Dr. Richard Lichenstein, director of Pediatric Emergency Medicine Research at the University of Maryland Hospital for Children in Baltimore. She was among 116 cases studied. 

    The findings: Wearing headphones while walking on roads can be a fatal distraction.

    The number of people killed or seriously injured as a result of not being aware of their surroundings because they were wearing headphones has tripled in the past six years, Lichenstein said.

    Results were published Tuesday in the journal Injury Prevention. The study found:

    • The number of deaths of people wearing headphones increased from 16 in 2004-2005 to 47 in 2010-2011.
    • The majority were male (68 percent) and 67 percent were under the age of 30.
    • The majority of vehicles involved were trains (55 percent).
    • 89 percent of cases occurred in urban counties.

    Lichenstein and three researchers delved into the National Electronic Injury Surveillance System, the United States Consumer Product Safety Commission, Google News Archives and Westlaw Campus Research Database from Jan. 1, 2004 to June 1, 2011.

    "Sensory deprivation that results from using headphones with electronic devices may be a unique problem in pedestrian incidents, where auditory cues can be more important than visual ones,” the study cited.

    Click here to read the original article (pdf)

    More content from msnbc.com and NBC News:

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    • La. official wants to ban pajamas in public
    • Baby born on commuter train
    • Romney takes fire on Bain, tax returns in debate

     

    170 comments

    55% of the deaths were by trains. Here's a novel thought: don't walk on train tracks!

    Show more
    Explore related topics: amtrak, pedestrians, maryland, fatalities, ipods, headphones, road-deaths

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