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Personal noise exposure assessment of Kuwaiti printing industry workers

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posted on 2025-05-09, 17:16 authored by Abdullah Alabdulhadi
Recent technological improvements in the printing industry may have altered noise exposures in printeries. Of the eight printery noise assessments published since 2000, none assessed the exposure of workers using computer-to-plate machines and only two used personal noise dosimetry. This method measures noise levels as the worker moves about and permits examination of the impulsiveness of noise levels. In this study, 104 workers wore personal noise dosimeters for one full shift. Computer-to-plate operators experienced noise exposures of 75 dB(A) on average and were rarely exposed to noise levels greater than 85 dB(A). Noise exposure in excess of 85 dB(A) was still common among offset printer operators. In fact, all workers operating web-fed offset machines spent more than half the shift experiencing noise levels greater than 85 dB(A). We found that the 5-min rolling SD of noise levels accurately reflected the impulsivity observed in the noise level profile

History

Journal title

International Journal of Occupational Safety and Ergonomics

Volume

27

Issue

2

Pagination

578-588

Publisher

Taylos & Francis

Language

  • en, English

College/Research Centre

Faculty of Health and Medicine

School

School of Health Sciences

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