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Journal Article

Citation

Ana GR, Shendell DG, Brown GE, Sridhar MK. J. Environ. Public Health 2009; 2009(online): 739502.

Affiliation

College of Medicine, University of Ibadan, Ibadan, Nigeria.

Copyright

(Copyright © 2009, Hindawi Publishing)

DOI

10.1155/2009/739502

PMID

20041025

PMCID

PMC2779457

Abstract

Background. Most schools in Ibadan, Nigeria, are located near major roads (mobile line sources). We conducted an initial assessment of noise levels and adverse noise-related health and learning effects. Methods. For this descriptive, cross-sectional study, four schools were selected randomly from eight participating in overall project. We administered 200 questionnaires, 50 per school, assessing health and learning-related outcomes. Noise levels (A-weighted decibels, dBA) were measured with calibrated sound level meters. Traffic density was assessed for school with the highest measured dBA. Observational checklists assessed noise control parameters and building physical attributes. Results. Short-term, cross-sectional school-day noise levels ranged 68.3-84.7 dBA. Over 60% of respondents reported that vehicular traffic was major source of noise, and over 70% complained being disturbed by noise. Three schools reported tiredness, and one school lack of concentration, as the most prevalent noise-related health problems. Conclusion. Secondary school occupants in Ibadan, Nigeria were potentially affected by exposure to noise from mobile line sources.


Language: en

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