A challenge to the evidence behind noise guidelines for UK hospitals

Author:

Hampton T12ORCID,Everett S3,Goldsmith E3,Lee P J4

Affiliation:

1. Department of Clinical Sciences, Liverpool School of Tropical Medicine , Liverpool, L3 5QA , UK

2. University of Liverpool , Liverpool, L69 3BX , UK

3. Hydrock , Manchester, M2 4DN , UK

4. Acoustics Research Unit, School of Architecture, University of Liverpool , Liverpool, L69 3BX , UK

Abstract

Abstract Background Teams assessing hospital noise against international guidelines regularly find that noise exceeds perceived safe levels in clinical settings. The care of sick people may be inherently noisy but recent efforts to tackle the problem propose a wider scope to identify sources and qualities of noise as well as more precision with noise recording. Aims We sought to challenge the scientific evidence cited in the four major documents pertaining to hospital noise in the UK to clarify if evidence of harm from noise included in guidelines is available, contemporary and of high quality. Methods Our team of hearing-health clinicians, acoustic scientists and acoustic engineers have conducted a narrative scoping review focused on critically appraising four of the most cited guidelines against which noise is measured in healthcare settings in the UK. Results There is a lack of high-quality evidence for commonly accepted consequences of noise cited in current guidelines. Conclusions The current evidence base for noise guidelines in a healthcare setting is largely based on subjective heterogeneous and inconclusive research. Whilst reduced noise is not disputed as potentially beneficial for patient care, further hypothesis-driven research and interventions assessing the benefits or outcomes of any such intervention should be sought to produce high-quality evidence of relevance on the clinical coalface.

Funder

Wellcome Trust

Publisher

Oxford University Press (OUP)

Subject

Public Health, Environmental and Occupational Health

Reference41 articles.

1. The Control of Noise at Work Regulations 2005;Health and Safety Executive (HSE)

2. Identification and modification of environmental noise in an ICU setting;Kahn;Chest,1998

3. An investigation of sound levels on intensive care units with reference to the WHO guidelines;Darbyshire;Crit Care,2013

4. Sound reduction management in the neonatal intensive care unit for preterm or very low birth weight infants;Almadhoob;Cochrane Database Syst Rev,2020

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