Today’s Enclosed Gun Battles Can Increase Hearing Injuries

Army Earplug Lawsuit News

Hearing loss comes in varying degrees and affects many returning service members

Monday, July 8, 2019 - If ever there was a generalization that could be made about the military life it would be that combat is loud. Rifles and machine guns, mortars and rockets, and improvised explosive devices not only can take a soldier's life but also can leave a soldier hearing impaired. In wars of the past combat-related explosions and gunfire's noise was disbursed into an open-air battlefield. Today's urban warfare combat environments are closed within buildings and expose soldiers to much higher decibels levels. Hearing loss and tinnitus are two of the military's most pervasive forms of injury for soldiers returning from Combat in the Middle East. Hearing loss-related disability payments cost in US taxpayers billions of dollars every year.

Virtually every soldier that is exposed to combat noise suffers from hearing loss to some degree. Hearing loss can have just as great a negative impact on combat performance as any other injury. In addition to hearing loss service members have filed for disability for ear-related injuries such as cancer or the loss of one or both ears.

Combat-related hearing loss is categorized for the purposes of making disability payments into one of four different levels... mild, moderate, severe and profound.

According to WebMD.com hearing loss classification are based on the decibel level one can hear. "Mild hearing loss ranges from 21 to 40 decibels. Moderate hearing loss ranges from 41 to 55 decibels. Moderately severe hearing loss ranges from 56 to 70 decibels. Severe hearing loss is in the range of 71 to 90 decibels. Profound hearing loss is greater than 90 decibels."

Soldiers with mild and moderate hearing loss can hear sounds of between 25 and 40 dB and have difficulty keeping up hearing in noisy surroundings. Those with moderate hearing loss may have difficulty hearing normal conversation even in quiet surroundings. A person with severe hearing loss can hear some sounds but only faintly and cannot generally hold a rigorous conversation. A person with profound hearing loss cannot hear a thing and is considered deaf.

One cause or hearing damage for US service members returning from combat is the faulty and defective 3M army earplugs that soldiers were issued. The 3M Army Earplug promised to provide state-of-the-art hearing protection for soldiers in enclosed urban fighting environments. 3M told soldiers that all they would have to do is switch the air plug and they could then hear essential military communications. The 3M Army Earplug does not fit snugly enough to provide the level of protection soldiers expected. The device is also highly impractical as it requires a soldier to stop what they are doing, put down their weapon, take off their helmet, and swap ends of the earplug. Thousands of soldiers have returned home from service and have had to file disability benefit claims for their hearing loss ranging from moderate to severe. Some soldiers have also suffered from tinnitus from their service-related hearing injury. Thousands of soldiers are consulting a 3M Army Earplugs attorney and filing suit against the device's manufacturer claiming that the company was negligent in failing to warn them of the safety device's shortcomings.

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