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Hearing damage - using whistle
Hello
What do you think about hearing damage as a result of using a whistle often (long term)? After games where I use my whistle often (eg. head referee) I face a little tinitus noise in my ear(s). It's gone after a while (1 hour). I use a Fox F40 whistle. What kind of whistles do you use in order to avoid "early" hearing damages? Thanks for your thoughts ML99 |
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If you work ALOT and for many, many years, you are going to have some hearing loss at some point. When it happens and how bad it gets would depend on how often you are blowing your whistle, which depends somewhat on the position you work.
The type you will have is called Tinnitus and gets worse with age. My father has it from hunting a lot when he was young until he was in his 50's. It is not very treatable and here is a link for you to learn more. http://www.entnet.org/healthinfo/hearing/tinnitus.cfm |
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Quote:
As I started reading I was thnking "I bet he uses a God-awful Fox 40". Switch to an Acme Thunderer and I bet your problems will disappear. Fox 40 would be fine if you work at a huge stadium where there is lots of noise but for a "normal" game, it's overkill. Anybody who steps on a field with me with a Fox 40 will be pulling it out of their ***. |
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That is one thing I have not thought about doing, EAR PLUGS! What a great idea. If the coach asks why, just tell them you have an ear infection and you cannot expose it to the elements. What a GREAT idea. Do you think I can get away with it?
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Custom earplugs
I realized a few years ago that I was facing the same thing because of the whistle... I was having trouble hearing, getting headaches, and having trouble sleeping on days when I worked multiple games. (Using Acme, not Fox 40.)
I called a local speech & hearing clinic and got fitted for custom ear plugs, which have been great. They sit inside the ear and are flesh colored, so they're discreet enough that nobody notices. They block out most of the whistle sound, but you can still hear it when other officials blow their whistles. If you wear them, you'll definitely notice a difference at the end of the game when you take them out. I've been wearing them anytime I work sub-varsity games or have multiple games in one day, and my hearing-related problems have vanished. (If I have a single varsity game, I go without so I can hear what the officials, players and coaches are saying more clearly... single games don't affect me as much as multiple games do.) My health insurance covered them, but I don't think that's typical for most people... they might set you back a few game checks. Well worth it, though, in my opinion. I've seen enough hearing aids on older officials at the weekly meetings to know it's a good idea. |
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