March Madness and babies: Are the sounds of the game too big for little ears?
The NCAA basketball tournament is not only exciting, it’s loud! The roar of the crowd and the buzzing of the buzzer as time expires can reach the same volume levels as a jackhammer!
Those noises can also be too much for little ears, according to Dr. Emily Boss, director of children’s ear, nose and throat surgery at Johns Hopkins University.
“We measure loudness in decibels,” Boss said. “A conversation is probably 60 or 65 decibels. Sporting events, concerts, very loud traffic, fireworks can reach decibels somewhere above 95, even up to 110 or 120.”
As loud as those sounds are for adults, Boss says they can seem even louder to babies and toddlers.
She explains that younger children still have developing hearing nervous systems and smaller ear canals, so a loud sound in a smaller ear canal can be amplified even louder.
She says don’t be fooled by the size of the venue. Small sports bars can be as loud as a stadium if you’re sitting close enough to the people doing the hooting and hollering.
So what’s the right age to take a child to a sporting event without worrying too much about the noise?
“We would say probably 2 years old and greater is when you could start taking your children to sporting events and feel more confident about protecting their hearing,” she says. “It’s really just about not sitting right in the thick of the action. Don’t sit next to the game horn.”
To protect your child’s hearing, Boss recommends giving them frequent 15-minute breaks from the noise. You can take them to the lobby or the snack bar. Earmuffs, noise-reducing headphones or ear plugs are also a good idea.
Boss also says, “It’s not just about that one event that you’re taking your child to, but if you’re taking your child to that one event every week, it’s those repeated exposures over time that can contribute to hearing loss.”
A simple rule to remember: if it’s too loud for you, it’s too loud for them.
They had left their DEI roles. Trump still fired them
The Trump administration is firing hundreds and perhaps thousands of federal workers as part of a crackdown on diversity, equity and inclusion efforts. Many of the fired weren't in DEI jobs.
Wall Street leaders warn of harsh economic consequences from Trump’s tariffs
The business sector has tried to avoid criticizing Trump in public and welcomed his vows of lower taxes and deregulation, but the market sell-off appears to have loosened more tongues on Wall Street.
Transfer to Alaska? Offer to health leaders called ‘insult’ to Indian Health Service
NPR obtained emails that went out last week to leaders at health agencies offering to transfer them to postings in tribal communities. Officials close to Dr. Anthony Fauci got the offer.
WBHM wins 3 ABBY Awards
WBHM 90.3 FM won 3 ABBY Awards for 2025 – a prestigious honor given annually by the Alabama Broadcasters Association. The ABA presented the awards Saturday, April 5 in Birmingham.
Most Americans want to read more books. We just don’t.
When we worry about the declining rates of literacy and a lack of reading skills, it's often about children. But how often are adults reading these days? And what are we reading? A new NPR/Ipsos poll finds out.
‘All Boys Aren’t Blue’ tops the ALA’s list of most challenged books
Organized pressure groups, not individual parents, are leading the fight to remove books from shelves, according to a new report from the American Library Association.