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MANY SOLDIERS ARE RETURNING FROM COMBAT WITH
HEARING PROBLEMS -- 60% of soldiers who return
from
Iraq or Afghanistan suffer from noise-induced
hearing
loss and 49% also suffer from tinnitus.

New Hampshire resident Rob Conley,
now in the U.S. Army, trains in a Humvee. Conley suffered hearing
loss after combat in Iraq. |
Story here...
http://www.eagletribune.com/
punews/local_story_119010140.html
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Many soldiers are returning from combat with
hearing problems
Krystal Hicks
When Robert Conley, 22, left his New Hampshire home in 2004 to join the
Army, he never thought flying home for a visit would cause him physical
pain, he said. But it did because of the damage to his ears he suffered
as a result of his combat experience in Iraq.
He is one of many soldiers suffering from noise-induced hearing loss, a
condition specialists now consider an “epidemic” within the military.
Sixty percent of soldiers who return from Iraq or Afghanistan suffer
from noise-induced hearing loss, and 49 percent also suffer from
tinnitus, a potentially debilitating ringing of the ears, according to
military audiology reports.
While troops are educated in the proper use of special noise-blocking
devices, many audiologists and soldiers say any kind of earplug is
impractical.
“While you want soldiers to protect their hearing, you also want them to
be able to hear what’s going on around them to keep them safe,” said
Nashua-based audiologist Peggy Sheets. “It’s like choosing the lesser of
two evils.”
The damage caused by the “lesser” evil is now costing the government
more money than ever in compensation to veterans, said Jennifer DuPriest,
director of advocacy and public policy for the American Tinnitus
Association.
Hearing loss can be quick
With an Improvised Explosive Device explosion sounding at over 140
decibels, a single blast can cause hearing loss or tinnitus instantly,
DuPriest said.
Conley, who grew up in Gonic, outside Rochester, said his hearing was
“immaculate” when he enlisted, but it deteriorated when he became a
gunner for his platoon in Iraq.
The first time a bomb blew out his hearing was four months into his
deployment, while he was manning the weaponry on top of a Bradley, a
minitank, he said.
“We rolled over a bomb,” said Conley, now stationed in Kentucky. “I just
remember being knocked out and then coming to and seeing smoke. I guess
my commanding officer was screaming, ‘Conley, are you OK?’ over and
over, but I couldn’t hear anything.”
The blast caused his ears to bleed, he said, but after a few days of
silence his hearing came back.
He said he lost his hearing six times in Iraq, but that wasn’t a lot
compared to others in his platoon.
“There are 19 guys in my platoon,” Conley said. “One lost (his hearing)
17 times. You don’t think it’s a big deal because it happens to
everyone. They tell us to suck it up, so we do.”
The decibel level of today’s warfare is the primary reason for an
increase in hearing loss, DuPriest said.
“War has always been loud. However, in this particular war, it’s being
fought mostly on the ground,” she said. “IEDs detonate at a sound
pressure level of 140 decibels, which is loud enough to cause permanent
hearing damage and tinnitus in just a few milliseconds.”
Marine Sgt. Francisco Urena of Lawrence was honorably discharged in 2005
after being struck in the cheek with shrapnel in Iraq.
Once home, he started worrying about more than his face and his sore
back — he kept having to ask people to repeat themselves two or three
times before he could understand what they were saying.
“I thought I was having hearing loss,” said Urena, now Lawrence’s
veterans agent. “I got tested a couple times. It came back to normal
after a while. Everything is loud over there. Even the way people talk.
... And you have the preventive ear protection, but sometimes you get
carried away. ...
“You don’t know when an IED is going to go off next to your tank,” Urena
said. “There’s some things you can’t control.”
Earplugs get mixed reviews
New Hampshire National Guardsman Luke Koladish was one of more than
339,000 veterans on disability for tinnitus in 2005. Koladish, who
served a year in Iraq, collects $115 a month in compensation, which
DuPriest said is the standard payment.
Koladish, who grew up in Windham and now attends the University of New
Hampshire, said the high-pitched whine in his ears is more noticeable
when he watches TV or reads.
“I just try and ignore it,” Koladish said. “It’s scary though because
(the VA Center) tells you there’s always a chance your hearing could
deteriorate more over time.”
In Iraq, Koladish said, he was stationed near an airstrip, constantly
surrounded by loud air traffic.
“The official word is, you’re supposed to wear ear and eye protection at
all times,” he said. “But if you’re in the field and have to take your
earplugs out to complete a mission, you do it.”
Conley said using earplugs in combat is more of a liability than
anything.
“If you wear earplugs, you can’t hear what’s going on around you,” said
Conley, whose job as a cavalry scout requires him to be even more aware
of his surroundings while he scopes out buildings. “The Bradleys are
loud, too, but you still need to be able to hear what’s coming over the
radio, so you don’t always wear the earplugs.”
Cavalry scout Matthew Reardon, who grew up in Nashua, said he hasn’t
been in combat yet, but his hearing has already been affected.
“The only time anyone actually wears earplugs is when we’re training at
a range,” said Reardon, 21, who trained in Egypt for four months. “You
just can’t wear your radio and the plugs at the same time.”
Reardon’s father, a disabled veteran, also experienced hearing loss as a
result of his time in the military.
North Andover Veterans Agent Edward Mitchell said older veterans have a
harder time proving their hearing loss was a result of their service.
“I have older veterans who just don’t have the documentation,” Mitchell
said. “In the old days there were no real ear protections. But they
didn’t get tested either. ... You know it contributed. They were in
engine rooms with no ear plugs. But you can’t prove it, so it makes it
difficult for us.”
Risk to others
DuPriest said studies have shown hearing-impaired soldiers can put their
entire platoon at risk, as well as themselves.
Hearing impairment may delay a soldier’s ability to identify a target by
up to 50 seconds, according to “Tank Gunner Performance and Hearing
Impairment,” a study published in a 1990 Army Research, Development, and
Acquisition magazine.
Anything over 85 decibels of steady noise (aircraft or tanks) or 140
decibels of impulse noise (bombs or weapon fire) can cause damage,
according to the U.S. Army Center for Health Promotion and Preventative
Medicine.
The helicopters most commonly used for transport all present steady
noise at over 100 decibels, according to the center’s Web site.
“The Bradleys can get up to 158 decibels,” DuPriest said. “And that’s
not even when they’re firing the gun.”
DuPriest said even small changes can make a big difference.
“Look at the old aircraft carriers and ships that aren’t acoustically
sound,” DuPriest said. “When (the Army) improves body armor and helmets,
why not improve them for hearing, too? Without change, this is going to
be one of those things that spirals out of control.”
Staff writer Crystal Bozek contributed to this report.
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Larry Scott --