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How iPhone and Apple Watch can help protect you from hearing loss
How iPhone and Apple Watch can help protect you from hearing loss
WBOY
Release: 2023-05-19 20:16:24
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Background
In the United States, an estimated 37.5 million adults have hearing problems, and men are believed to be twice as likely as women to suffer from hearing loss (via the National Institute on Deafness and Other Communication Disorders).
Thankfully, iPhone and Apple Watch have ambient (ambient) and headphone decibel monitoring features that are quick and easy to use and include noise threshold warnings. To prevent hearing damage and loss, you can take the following steps: turn down the volume promptly, use protective earmuffs, or avoid noisy environments.
Too loud How loud is it?
So what are harmful decibel levels? This depends on the length of your exposure and the noise level. Here’s what Apple says:
Repeated, long-term exposure to sounds above 80 decibels can cause permanent damage. Consider using hearing protection or moving to a quieter location.
Apple Watch also shared examples of noise levels/exposure times that may cause temporary hearing loss:
80 decibels: approximately 5 hours and 30 minutes per day
85 dB: Approximately 1 hour and 45 minutes per day
90 dB: Approximately 30 minutes per day
95 dB: Just 10 minutes per day
100 dB: Even Minutes a Day
How to Check Decibel Levels Using iPhone and Apple Watch
Decibel Levels for iPhone and iPad
Interestingly, Apple doesn’t check decibel levels on iPhone and iPad A watchOS Noise app is available, so here's how to check your decibel levels:
Open the Settings app and select Control Center
If it doesn't already show up under "Included controls," swipe below and look for the green icon
Connect your headphones# next to
Hearing ##To iPhone
Now
Open Control Center(Swipe down from the top right corner of the screen) and look for the ear icon to see the headphone dB level
To turn on headphone audio louder alert, go to Settings > Accessibility > Audio/Video > Headphone Notifications and tap the toggle
You can make it less loud by going to Settings > Sound & Haptics > Headphone Safety >
"Sound" to limit loud sounds from your headphones
If you play music with headphones connected, you will see the decibels The meter appears in the Hearing tile in Control Center
Green indicates "normal" levels and yellow indicates "loud" levels that may damage your hearing
Click Hearing icon to learn more about headphone noise levels
While the music is paused, you can use the headset's microphone to measure
EnvironmentDecibel Level
Click the microphone icon in the lower left corner that says
Live Listen (or click the Live Listen rectangle)
Finally, you can also view your listening history for ambient and headphone decibel levels in the Health app
Tap
Browse tabs at the bottom
Select Now
Listening
You can use your Apple Watch to measure ambient and headphone decibel levels, the former works with the dedicated Noise app. A clever option is to take advantage of the Noise app's sophisticated capabilities to quickly read data from your wearable device.
To check ambient decibel levels, open the Noise app on your Apple Watch (you can also open it from your iPhone in the Apple Watch App > Noise)
If you have not used the Noise app before, please select to enable this feature
You can learn more by clicking "Learn more" at the bottom of the "Noise" app To learn more about the decibel levels you're exposed to
If you want quick access to decibel levels on your Apple Watch, compile a watch face using the Noise app
If you're in Settings feature, you can go back to Watch Apps > Noise > Noise Threshold on iPhone to change limits/noise notifications
To view headphone decibel levels on your Apple Watch, open Control Center on your watch (swipe up from the bottom of the screen at the bottom of the watch face)
Swipe down to the bottom
Click the ear icon
Here’s how the noise warning looks on the Apple Watch:
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