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Home » Audiometric Testing and Noise Assessment: Rethinking Workplace Hearing Safety
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Audiometric Testing and Noise Assessment: Rethinking Workplace Hearing Safety

Fardin AhmedBy Fardin AhmedFebruary 18, 2025Updated:April 11, 2025No Comments6 Mins Read
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Audiometric Testing and Noise Assessment Rethinking Workplace Hearing Safety
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Hearing safety at workplaces in Australia is a major concern now more than ever. Industries such as civil construction, mining, manufacturing and agriculture pose significant threats to workers’ hearing with their aggressive monitoring and control noise levels. Employers need to start taking responsibility for occupational hearing loss well beyond industry standard compliance by enhancing audiometric testing and assessing noise levels more thoroughly.

As regulatory oversight ramps up and employees begin to recognize their entitlement, companies need to shift from being responsive to being anticipatory by sophisticated noise management techniques and current hearing protection techniques. In this blog post, I will discuss how the combining audiometric testing with extensive noise assessment will be the new paradigm for safety in Australian workplaces.

Contents

  • 1 Hearing Protection Compliance is NOT Enough
    • 1.1 A Data Focused Approach Towards Hearing Safety
    • 1.2 Addressing Australia-Specific Workplace Challenges
    • 1.3 Quieter Workplaces: Moving Beyond Wearing Protective Equipment
    • 1.4 The Case for Sound Safety on Hearing: Business Perspective
    • 1.5 Conclusion: Starting to Change the Paradigms of Audiometric Testing and Noise Assessment For the World of Tomorrow

Hearing Protection Compliance is NOT Enough

Most Australian companies look at audiometric testing and noise assessment as an RSMS exercise pertaining to compliance with noise metrics set by Safe Work Australia. The issue with a mere compliance approach is that it doesn’t ensure that employees are protected against hearing damage in the long term.

Major Problems of Compliance-Oriented Model:

???? Audiometric tests do not avoid damage: It is easier to assess the extent of hearing loss through audiometric tests than preventing hearing loss.

???? One-off noise assessments: Assessed noise exposure once every couple of years does not consider realistic and current risk levels.

???? Hearing Safety Goes Beyond Protection: Earplugs and earmuffs are an absolute last measure to mitigate damage. Hearing loss will continue to occur regardless.

Businesses looking to protect workers must pair audiometric tests with existing noise monitoring data to build preventative solutions that help minimize damage before it occurs.

A Data Focused Approach Towards Hearing Safety

1. Melding Noise Assessment And Audiometric Tests

Conventional audiometric tests are performed once every year or once every two years, however, the noise produced at a workplace is constantly changing with new equipment, process changes, and other external factors.

????Solution: Perform real time or current noise assessments and compare it to audiometric test data to identify patterns of damaging noise exposure.

✅ Benefits:

Prevention of hearing loss before it occurs.

Identification of noise source “hotspots” which enables firms to direct engineering solutions such as noise barriers or sound proofing units to those areas.

Evaluation on whether PPE works and if other measures are needed.

2. Real Time Noise Monitoring: Life Changing

Utilization of newer technologies allows for continuous noise monitoring instead of monitoring at certain intervals in Australian workplaces.

????The Process:

Noise monitoring systems powered by the Internet of Things (IoT) monitor the change of decibel level in various parts of a certain area or building. Data from this is then associated with worker exposure logs which shows which employees are most exposed.

This system permits instant action to be taken when safety teams receive a noise level alert which exceeds the safe limit.

???? Outcome:

Damage can now be avoided as businesses no longer have to wait for the hearing loss data from audiometric tests to take action.

Workers are taking steps in safeguarding their hearing by not getting exposed to high noise levels within their working zone.

3. Linking Audiometric Data to Risk Management

A risk register in an Australian workplace usually comprises only of physical injuries neglecting the incremental hearing loss which is a permanent yet completely avoidable one.

???? Solution: Do not remiss to add the results of audiometric tests to the risk register of the workplace as this will allow checking hearing trends and risks for their mitigation in advance.

???? Key Benefits:

It becomes possible to intervene before significant damage is done by early detection of employees with slight hearing shifts.

Based on the hearing test results, employers can change the work environments to more favorable conditions.

This assists companies to show that they are managing risks appropriately for the WHS audit which lowers the legal and insurance risks.

Addressing Australia-Specific Workplace Challenges

1. Remote and Outdoor Work Environments

Some unique challenges for an mining, agriculture, and construction industries are as follows:

Employees work in highly variable noise environments.

In open areas, weather has an impact on the amount of noise exposure.

There is less access to more frequent audiometric testing.

???? Solution:

Use mobile audiometric testing services to remotely assess multiple work sites.

Apply personal noise dosimeters for workstation specific measurement of individual employee exposure rather than peripheral noise measurement.

2. Increasingly Multicultural Australian Workforce

An Australian workforce has workers of different ethnicities and ages.

???? Challenge:

Younger employees are less likely to be concerned about excessive noise and its impact.

Middle aged employees with hearing disabilities are more likely to suffer from hearing loss.

???? Solution:

Adjust hearing loss prevention education for different employee ages and experiences.

Use results from audiometric tests to tailor hearing conservation programs to individual employees.

Quieter Workplaces: Moving Beyond Wearing Protective Equipment

Earplugs and earmuffs are pieces of PPE. While they are highly necessary, they should not be the first line of defense for excess noise in the workplace. The focus for Australian companies should be on administrative controls and engineering controls.

???? Key Strategies:

✅ Purchasing less noisy Equipment – Buying machines with a reputation for being less noisy.

✅ Noise Sources Enclosure – Building barriers around noisome equipment.

✅ Timeallocation for Worker movement – Providing service rotation to workers to minimize presence duration in high sound areas.

✅ Noiseless construction of work areas – Using noise mitigating construction material in constructive and manufacturing facilities.

The Case for Sound Safety on Hearing: Business Perspective

Applying an audiometric evaluation and noise control plan is more than keeping regulations; it makes business sense:

Reduced Claims From Workers Compensation

Deafness claims are usually chronic and costly.

Acting early minimizes liability and costs in the long run.

Increased Productivity

Workers suffering hearing loss will have difficulty talking, thus not as productive.

A managed quiet environment enables calmer and more positive state of health.

Stronger Competitor Image

Most proactive health and safety companies have a better reputation which helps them attract and keep great employees.

Staying in front of the regulations saves a business from getting sued.

Conclusion: Starting to Change the Paradigms of Audiometric Testing and Noise Assessment For the World of Tomorrow

It is no longer optional but indispensable for Australian businesses to integrate real time noise measurement with audiometric examinations. Hearing safety should not be viewed as a compliance issue, but as a strategic initiative to be pursued in the workplace.

Hearing loss is permanent, but hearing loss is fully preventable. Most companies in Australia should take a stronger stand and offer more appropriate measures in protecting employees in the workplace. Doing so will drastically improve workplace safety alongside reducing long-term costs.

The future of workplace safety in Australia requires a more proactive approach concerning the timing of intervention and management of risks. So long as we continue to focus on the traditional approach to noise assessment and audiometric testing, hearing loss will always be a prevalent issue.

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