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Teen Health - Health Topics - Hearing - 0 views

  • The amount of energy in the noise and the damage it can do to your hearing increases very rapidly as it gets louder. In fact, noise energy doubles for every 3 decibels (3dB) increase in the loudness of the sound - and 3dB is such a small increase in loudness that you probably wouldn't even notice it.
  • What sort of noise causes the harm? For young people in particular, the most dangerous noise is amplified music, for example in gigs and clubs. Headphones, car stereos and mobile phones are also having a bad effect on the hearing of young people.
  • Research shows that 25% of people listen to headphones at a level that will cause hearing damage. Follow the 60/60 rule - don't have your player above 60% of the maximum volume, and don't listen to it for more than 60 minutes at a time.
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  • One study suggests that listening to headphones at 80% for 90 minutes a day can lead to hearing loss. The authors say that this can take years for the damage to show up, so young people might not notice a loss of hearing until they are in their late 20s. At 100% for only five minutes you could do damage.
  • dulled hearing difficulty in understanding speech feeling full inside your ears ringing or high-pitched noise in your ears
  • In night clubs - where much of the damage is done - do not stay long, don't go too often and keep well away from the loudspeakers - or go somewhere else where the music is not so loud.
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    Information specifically on the effects on teens and the teenage ear
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Teenage Pregnancy: MedlinePlus - 0 views

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    teen pregnancy.
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Florida Teen Sacrifices Arm to Gator and Jokes Through Pain - 0 views

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    A Florida teenager who came face-to-snout with a 10-foot alligator made a split-second choice that likely saved his life, but cost him his arm. Kaleb Langdale, 17, really showed his courage when he smiled and joked through the pain and loss of his right arm.
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'The New Gay Teenager' - 0 views

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    This site is on homosexuality
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As unhealthy food outlets multiply, teens eat more junk - 0 views

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    Nearly three-quarters of California teenagers live or go to school in neighborhoods disproportionately crowded with fast food and other outlets that sell unhealthy food, including convenience stores, liquor stores, dollar stores and pharmacies.
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Teen Brains' Growing Pains - Science News - 0 views

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    Striking changes are possible in IQ and neuroanatomy, study finds Web edition : Wednesday, October 19th, 2011 The roller-coaster teenage years can take IQs along for the ride. A person's IQ can nosedive and climb sky-high during adolescence, while corresponding brain regions wax and wane in bulk, researchers report online October 19 in Nature.
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