Friday, June 12, 2020 - Hearing protection is finally getting the attention that it deserves as the critical protective combat device that it is primarily because thousands of soldiers that returned home from overseas wars in Iraq and Afghanistan with catastrophic hearing damage have created media attention by filing lawsuits seeking lump-sum monetary damages. Soldiers with hearing loss or tinnitus allege that 3M, the maker of the faulty and defective 3M Dual-Sided Combat Army Earplug misrepresented the device as being one that would protect soldier's hearing from explosions, gunfire blasts, and loud machinery, while simultaneously enabling a soldier to hear critical low-frequency battlefield voice communications. In reality, the earplug's one-size-fits-all construction failed to take into account the different heights, depths, and widths of each soldier's ear canal and allowed deafening high-decibel noise to enter. Soldiers returning home from overseas have consulted with Combat Earplug attorneys to see if their hearing damage qualifies them to join others in seeking damages for lost wages, reimbursement of medical expenses, and the loss of consortium for not being able to enjoy life's basic pleasures like having an adult relationship or raising children.
According to Task and Purpose.com, "Veterans have filed more than 1,000 lawsuits accusing 3M of making defective earplugs." 3M is being accused of looking the other way and ignoring what they knew of the defective hearing protection device. "Army, National Guard and Navy veterans from Minnesota to California and Texas" are accusing 3M of "knowingly making defective earplugs that caused vets to lose hearing during combat in Iraq or Afghanistan or while training on U.S. military bases." T and P report that 3M claims that they can not be held accountable for soldier's hearing loss because the product was designed by working in conjunction with army officers and to the exact specifications the army required, and also that soldiers may not have been properly trained by the military in the proper use of the hearing protection device. T and P writes that lawyers representing soldiers have uncovered documents that will be presented in court that prove that Aearo Inc., the company that originally made the Dual-Sided Combat Army Earplug and was acquired by 3M, knew in advance of the product's shortcomings. "Many of the lawsuits point to internal Aearo documents, alleging the company knew the earplugs could slip and might not have been long enough to fully protect military members' from loud noises." The Combat Earplugs required that a soldier stop what he was doing and switch the earplugs from one end to the other when blocking out all noises including explosions was required, and according to soldiers "that did not happen."
In an attempt to solve the problem of misfitting earplugs, the army has made breakthroughs recently in the 3D printing of army earplugs based on computerized measurements of each soldier's inner-ear specifications. In May of 2020, 3D Printing Industry.com reported: "Researchers from the US Army Aeromedical Research Laboratory have used 3D printing to produce and test customizable earplugs for members of the US Armed Forces. The army scientists' new technique for producing ear protection, could be deployed to prevent hearing loss among members of the armed forces."
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