M M Haines1, S A Stansfeld, R F Job, B Berglund, J Head. 1. Department of Psychiatry, St Bartholomew's and The Royal London School of Medicine and Dentistry, Queen Mary and Westfield College, London, UK. M.M.Haines@qmw.ac.uk
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Children are a high-risk group vulnerable to the effects of chronic aircraft noise exposure. This study examines the effects of aircraft noise exposure on children's health and cognition around London Heathrow airport and tests sustained attention as an underlying mechanism of effects of noise on reading and examines the way children adapt to continued exposure to aircraft noise. METHODS: In this repeated measures epidemiological field study, the cognitive performance and health of 275 children aged 8-11 years attending four schools in high aircraft noise areas (16-h outdoor Leq > 66 dBA) was compared with children attending four matched control schools exposed to lower levels of aircraft noise (16-h outdoor Leq < 57 dBA). The children first examined at baseline were examined again after a period of one year at follow-up. Health questionnaires and cognitive tests were group administered to the children in the schools. RESULTS AND CONCLUSIONS: At follow-up chronic aircraft noise exposure was associated with higher levels of annoyance and perceived stress, poorer reading comprehension and sustained attention, measured by standardized scales after adjustment for age, social deprivation and main language spoken. These results do not support the sustained attention hypothesis previously used to account for the effects of noise on cognition in children. The reading and annoyance effects do not habituate over a one-year period and do not provide strong evidence of adaptation.
BACKGROUND:Children are a high-risk group vulnerable to the effects of chronic aircraft noise exposure. This study examines the effects of aircraft noise exposure on children's health and cognition around London Heathrow airport and tests sustained attention as an underlying mechanism of effects of noise on reading and examines the way children adapt to continued exposure to aircraft noise. METHODS: In this repeated measures epidemiological field study, the cognitive performance and health of 275 children aged 8-11 years attending four schools in high aircraft noise areas (16-h outdoor Leq > 66 dBA) was compared with children attending four matched control schools exposed to lower levels of aircraft noise (16-h outdoor Leq < 57 dBA). The children first examined at baseline were examined again after a period of one year at follow-up. Health questionnaires and cognitive tests were group administered to the children in the schools. RESULTS AND CONCLUSIONS: At follow-up chronic aircraft noise exposure was associated with higher levels of annoyance and perceived stress, poorer reading comprehension and sustained attention, measured by standardized scales after adjustment for age, social deprivation and main language spoken. These results do not support the sustained attention hypothesis previously used to account for the effects of noise on cognition in children. The reading and annoyance effects do not habituate over a one-year period and do not provide strong evidence of adaptation.
Authors: Elise van Kempen; Irene van Kamp; Erik Lebret; Jan Lammers; Harry Emmen; Stephen Stansfeld Journal: Environ Health Date: 2010-06-01 Impact factor: 5.984
Authors: Amar J Mehta; Laura D Kubzansky; Brent A Coull; Itai Kloog; Petros Koutrakis; David Sparrow; Avron Spiro; Pantel Vokonas; Joel Schwartz Journal: Environ Health Date: 2015-01-27 Impact factor: 5.984
Authors: Martin Becker; Saverio Caminiti; Donato Fiorella; Louise Francis; Pietro Gravino; Mordechai Muki Haklay; Andreas Hotho; Vittorio Loreto; Juergen Mueller; Ferdinando Ricchiuti; Vito D P Servedio; Alina Sîrbu; Francesca Tria Journal: PLoS One Date: 2013-12-11 Impact factor: 3.240