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Health effects of chronic noise exposure in pregnancy and childhood: A systematic review initiated by ENRIECO

Hohmann, Cynthia
Grabenhenrich, Linus
de Kluizenaar, Yvonne
Tischer, Christina
Heinrich, Joachim
Chen, Chih-Mei
Thijs, Carel
Nieuwenhuijsen, Mark
Keil, Thomas
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Abstract
Background: Chronic noise is an environmental pollutant and well-known to cause annoyance and sleep disturbance. Its association with clinical and subclinical adverse health effects has been discussed. Objectives: This systematic review aimed to examine associations between chronic noise exposure during pregnancy or childhood and health outcomes in early and late childhood. Methods: Following a systematic electronic literature search (MEDLINE, EMBASE), an additional hand search and a critical evaluation of potential articles by 2 independent reviewers, 29 studies were included: 12 on pregnancy/birth outcomes with samples ranging from 115 to 22,761 and 17 on cardiovascular and immune-mediated health outcomes in childhood with samples ranging from 43 to 1542. Evidence levels (3 to 2++) were rated according to the Scottish Intercollegiate Guidelines Network. Results: Chronic noise exposure during pregnancy was not associated with birth weight, preterm birth, congenital anomalies, perinatal and neonatal death based on 6 cohort, 4 case–control, and 2 cross-sectional studies (highest evidence level 2+). There was some evidence supporting an association of chronic noise exposure with increased systolic blood pressure and stress hormone levels in urine and saliva in children evaluating 2 cohort and 15 cross-sectional studies (highest evidence level 2−). Conclusions: There seemed to be no associations between chronic noise and pregnancy outcomes based on studies with evidence levels up to 2+. Associations between chronic noise and health in children were based mainly on cross-sectional studies. However, the studies included in this comprehensive systematic review showed a high variation in study design, outcome, exposure and confounder assessments.
Keywords
chronic noise, noise exposure, pregnancy, birth outcomes, paediatric outcomes, children, adolescents
Date
2013
Type
Journal article
Journal
International Journal of Hygiene and Environmental Health
Book
Volume
216
Issue
3
Page Range
217-229
Article Number
ACU Department
Mary MacKillop Institute for Health Research
Faculty of Health Sciences
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