Aircraft noise 'link' to stroke and heart disease deaths
12 Oct BBC
The risks of stroke, heart and circulatory disease are higher in
areas with a lot of aircraft noise, researchers say.
Their study of 3.6 million residents near Heathrow Airport suggested
the risks were 10-20% higher in areas with the highest levels of
aircraft noise.The team's findings are published in the British Medical
Journal.They agreed with other experts that noise was not necessarily to
blame and more work was needed.
Their work suggests a higher risk for both hospital admissions and
deaths from stroke, heart and circulatory disease for the 2% of the
study - about 70,000 people who lived where the aircraft noise was
loudest.The lead author, Dr Anna Hansell, from Imperial College London,
said: "The exact role that noise exposure may play in ill health is not
well established.
"However, it is plausible that it might be contributing for example,
by raising blood pressure or by disturbing people's sleep." "There's a
'startle reaction' to loud noise - if you're suddenly exposed to it, the
heart rate and blood pressure increase.And aircraft noise can be
annoying for some people, which can also affect their blood pressure,
leading to illness.
"The relative importance of daytime and night-time noise from
aircraft also needs to be investigated further."
The study used data about noise levels in 2001 from the Civil
Aviation Authority, covering 12 London boroughs and nine districts
outside of London where aircraft noise exceeds 50 decibels about the
volume of a normal conversation in a quiet room.The authors say fewer
people are now affected by the highest levels of noise (above 63
decibels) - despite more planes being in the skies - because of changes
in aircraft design and flight plans. |