Dayton Daily News

Do hand dryers hurt kids’ hearing?

This 13-year-old studied it, and the results were published in a journal.

- By Niraj Chokshi © 2019 The New York Times

Do hand dryers pose a threat to children’s hearing?

The answer may be yes, according to a new study published in the official journal of the Canadian Paediatric Society, which found that some of the devices can be as loud as a sporting event or an approachin­g subway train.

To investigat­e that question, Nora Keegan, the study’s author, spent more than a year taking hundreds of measuremen­ts in public restrooms throughout Calgary, her hometown.

Her interest in the subject was not only academic, but also personal: She’s 13, after all.

“I found my ears hurting and also that children were covering their ears because the hand dryers were too loud, so I wondered if maybe they actually are dangerous to human ears, and I decided to test it,” she said in an interview from a summer camp north of Montreal.

‘We would just get in the car and drive all over’

Nora’s search began four years ago, in fifth grade, as she was trying to find a project for a science fair. She had complained often to her parents about noisy hand dryers, so she decided to investigat­e.

But what Nora found online was lacking: Hand dryer companies didn’t say how they had arrived at noise estimates for their devices.

“I thought maybe they only measured at an adult’s height or only a men’s height, so I decided to test children’s heights as well as women and men’s heights,” she said. She also found that the industry typically tested sound levels at 18 inches from the wall, a distance that seemed too far for a child’s shorter arms.

So, with help from her family and armed with a decibel meter, a ruler and a measuring tape, Nora began touring public restrooms in places children might frequent: schools, libraries and malls, as well as restaurant­s like Starbucks, Dairy Queen and, of course, the Canadian staple Tim Hortons.

“It was quite a fun adventure,” said her mother, Susan Bannister, who is a pediatrici­an. “We would just get in the car and drive all over.”

The measuremen­ts Nora collected on her first day were encouragin­g but alarming: After seeing the results, her parents decided to buy her noise-canceling headphones to use as she collected more measuremen­ts.

Nora’s research earned her a bronze medal at the science fair that year, and when the time came to choose a project the next year, she opted to collect more data. That decision paid off: In sixth grade, she won the gold and got valuable advice from the judges.

“A few of them said to me that I should write a paper, so then that got me thinking,” she said.

With help from her father, a family doctor, Nora started to assemble a draft paper in seventh grade. One journal rejected her paper, but Nora kept working and tried another. That publicatio­n, Paediatric­s & Child Health, published the study in June.

‘It raises some really great points’

For each hand dryer, Nora collected 20 measuremen­ts, gauging sound from five heights, from two distances and with or without hands present. What she found was striking and straightfo­rward.

“I read a lot of studies in this realm and, honestly, it’s super well-written,” said Frank Wartinger, an audiologis­t at Children’s Hospital of Philadelph­ia. “It raises some really great points.”

The noisiest of the 44 hand dryers Nora tested exceeded 100 dBA (a measure of decibels), when hands disrupted the airflow, she found. At that level, hearing loss is possible after about 15 minutes, according to the National Institute on Deafness and Other Communicat­ion Disorders. In Canada, toys that emit sounds over that level are banned.

At 110 dBA, hearing loss is pos

sible in less than two minutes. Sounds at 120 dBA, the highest measuremen­t Nora recorded, can cause pain and ear injury.

The loudest models were Excel Dryer’s Xlerator line, Comac Corp.’s Blast, and the Dyson Airblade and Airblade V. The quietest model was One, by Comac, which produced noise at less than 85 dBA in each measuremen­t.

In a statement, Dyson said it encouraged young people to pursue careers in science and engineerin­g, was “delighted” by Nora’s work and was eager to have her meet one of its acoustic engineers.

“We are keen to show Nora how our latest hand dryers are significan­tly quieter than their predecesso­rs thanks to research and developmen­t by our in-house acoustic engineers — perhaps she will want to join the team one day?” it said.

For now, Nora has other plans: She says she’d like to be a marine biologist or find some other way to help the environmen­t.

Neither Excel nor Comac responded to requests for comment.

‘I’ve learned to never give up’

For several reasons, children experience sound differentl­y from adults.

“Their ears are smaller, which means that sounds are louder going in, similar to how if you go into a restroom, your voice is going to be echoing and louder than if you go into a gymnasium,” Wartinger said.

At the same time, he said, adults, who have been desensitiz­ed by years of exposure to loud noises, may not even realize the effect that sounds have on their children. He likened it to living in a world where adults permanentl­y wear sunglasses while children go without.

Nora remains committed to the cause.

As she wrote the study in seventh grade, she also worked to create a filter to dampen the noise of the dryers. After nearly giving up, Nora was able to make a working prototype based on a synthetic air filter — the kind used in a furnace — bought from Home Depot.

The final model can reduce the sound of a hand dryer by about 11 dBA, she said, adding that she might try to patent the invention.

As rewarding as seeing her study published and creating the dampener may be, Nora said she was also thankful for what the process had taught her.

“I’ve learned to never give up, because if I had given up then it would never have come to this,” she said. “And also, I’ve learned that if you see something that you question, you should go for it and don’t stop.”

 ?? YORK TIMES SUSAN BANNISTER VIA THE NEW ?? In a photo from Susan Bannister, Nora Keegan measures the height of a hand dryer at her sister’s school, Branton Junior High School in Calgary, in 2016. Keegan noticed that dryers tended to be closer to children’s ears. So she set out on a study that was eventually published in a medical journal in Canada.
YORK TIMES SUSAN BANNISTER VIA THE NEW In a photo from Susan Bannister, Nora Keegan measures the height of a hand dryer at her sister’s school, Branton Junior High School in Calgary, in 2016. Keegan noticed that dryers tended to be closer to children’s ears. So she set out on a study that was eventually published in a medical journal in Canada.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States