Noise pollution affects our health adversely. At hospital, noise can harm health care professionals and patients too. It also affects the performance of the whole staff and therefore, the quality of the delivered services. This study aimed to assess noise levels nurses exposed to and to determine the sources of noise and nurses' complaints about it. A quantitative, descriptive cross sectional study was used. Noise levels at different departments in Palestine Medical Complex (PMC) were measured using an integrating sound level meter. A total of 180 nurses participated in the interviewing questionnaire. The results of the study showed that main sources of noise were: the loud arguments occurred between the health care staff and the relatives/visitors of the patients, loud conversations, the construction work and the renovation in the hospital, patients' crying/shouting, the medical equipment and the staff shouting. The main complaints were discomfort, bad communication, headache, fatigue, stress, irritability, low concentration, inattention, memory problems and noise effect on work efficiency. In most departments, morning shift was the noisiest shift and nurses (61.1%) considered work environment stressful and uncomfortable. Noise levels in all departments exceeded what is recommended by WHO with an average of 64.48 dBA. The minimum value of LAeq was 54.8 dBA in one CCU and the maximum one was 73.5 dBA in NICU. Conclusion: Different noise sources at PMC and many noise complaints were reported by nurses. Noise levels in different departments were above that recommended by WHO. The educational intervention should target nurses and the whole health care staff in order to increase their awareness about noise and to modify their behaviors to reduce it, as well as the effective management of medical devices and machines, repairing devices and physical space arrangement.
Published in | American Journal of Environmental Science and Engineering (Volume 8, Issue 2) |
DOI | 10.11648/j.ajese.20240802.13 |
Page(s) | 41-48 |
Creative Commons |
This is an Open Access article, distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International License (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/), which permits unrestricted use, distribution and reproduction in any medium or format, provided the original work is properly cited. |
Copyright |
Copyright © The Author(s), 2024. Published by Science Publishing Group |
Noise Pollution, Hospital Noise, Nurses, Noise Sources, Noise Effects, Noise Levels
Item | No. | % |
---|---|---|
Cardiac monitors | 83 | 46 |
Other medical equipment | 112 | 62 |
Conversation of patients' visitors | 139 | 77 |
Children playing | 91 | 51 |
Patients moaning or crying/shouting | 124 | 69 |
Co-workers conversations | 106 | 59 |
Shouting of nursing staff | 105 | 58 |
Shouting of medical staff | 98 | 54 |
Shift change of nursing staff | 100 | 56 |
Door bell | 85 | 47 |
Doors opening or closing | 74 | 41 |
Ringtones (phone ringing) | 129 | 72 |
Rolling of trolley wheels | 82 | 46 |
Cleaning personnel | 90 | 50 |
Loud arguments with patients' relatives and visitors | 150 | 83 |
Construction work and renovation | 139 | 77 |
Loud arguments with patients' relatives and visitors outside departments | 123 | 68 |
Vehicle traffic | 99 | 55 |
Item | No. | % |
---|---|---|
Discomfort | 175 | 97 |
Had to talk louder to be heard | 154 | 85.6 |
Difficulty in hearing others due to noise | 159 | 88.3 |
Tinnitus | 43 | 24 |
Dizziness | 57 | 31.7 |
Headache | 137 | 76.1 |
Fatigue | 135 | 75 |
Difficulty in sleeping after leaving work | 64 | 35.6 |
Stress | 163 | 90.6 |
Anxiety | 119 | 66.1 |
Irritability | 139 | 77.2 |
Depression | 44 | 24.4 |
Low concentration | 130 | 72.2 |
Difficulty in paying attention | 133 | 73.9 |
Memory problems | 85 | 47.2 |
Subjected to the risk of patient care errors | 70 | 38.9 |
Work efficiency is affected | 133 | 73.9 |
WHO | World Health Organization |
EPA | Environmental Protection Agency |
ICU | Intensive Care Unit |
ER | Emergency Room |
PMC | Palestine Medical Complex |
CCU | Cardiac Care Unit |
MOH | Ministry of Health |
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APA Style
Elafifi, M. A., Elawady, M. Y., Alrifai, A. M. (2024). Noise Pollution Exposure Among Nurses in a Public Hospital in Palestine. American Journal of Environmental Science and Engineering, 8(2), 41-48. https://doi.org/10.11648/j.ajese.20240802.13
ACS Style
Elafifi, M. A.; Elawady, M. Y.; Alrifai, A. M. Noise Pollution Exposure Among Nurses in a Public Hospital in Palestine. Am. J. Environ. Sci. Eng. 2024, 8(2), 41-48. doi: 10.11648/j.ajese.20240802.13
AMA Style
Elafifi MA, Elawady MY, Alrifai AM. Noise Pollution Exposure Among Nurses in a Public Hospital in Palestine. Am J Environ Sci Eng. 2024;8(2):41-48. doi: 10.11648/j.ajese.20240802.13
@article{10.11648/j.ajese.20240802.13, author = {May Ahmed Elafifi and Mohamed Yehia Elawady and Ayesha Mohammed Alrifai}, title = {Noise Pollution Exposure Among Nurses in a Public Hospital in Palestine }, journal = {American Journal of Environmental Science and Engineering}, volume = {8}, number = {2}, pages = {41-48}, doi = {10.11648/j.ajese.20240802.13}, url = {https://doi.org/10.11648/j.ajese.20240802.13}, eprint = {https://article.sciencepublishinggroup.com/pdf/10.11648.j.ajese.20240802.13}, abstract = {Noise pollution affects our health adversely. At hospital, noise can harm health care professionals and patients too. It also affects the performance of the whole staff and therefore, the quality of the delivered services. This study aimed to assess noise levels nurses exposed to and to determine the sources of noise and nurses' complaints about it. A quantitative, descriptive cross sectional study was used. Noise levels at different departments in Palestine Medical Complex (PMC) were measured using an integrating sound level meter. A total of 180 nurses participated in the interviewing questionnaire. The results of the study showed that main sources of noise were: the loud arguments occurred between the health care staff and the relatives/visitors of the patients, loud conversations, the construction work and the renovation in the hospital, patients' crying/shouting, the medical equipment and the staff shouting. The main complaints were discomfort, bad communication, headache, fatigue, stress, irritability, low concentration, inattention, memory problems and noise effect on work efficiency. In most departments, morning shift was the noisiest shift and nurses (61.1%) considered work environment stressful and uncomfortable. Noise levels in all departments exceeded what is recommended by WHO with an average of 64.48 dBA. The minimum value of LAeq was 54.8 dBA in one CCU and the maximum one was 73.5 dBA in NICU. Conclusion: Different noise sources at PMC and many noise complaints were reported by nurses. Noise levels in different departments were above that recommended by WHO. The educational intervention should target nurses and the whole health care staff in order to increase their awareness about noise and to modify their behaviors to reduce it, as well as the effective management of medical devices and machines, repairing devices and physical space arrangement. }, year = {2024} }
TY - JOUR T1 - Noise Pollution Exposure Among Nurses in a Public Hospital in Palestine AU - May Ahmed Elafifi AU - Mohamed Yehia Elawady AU - Ayesha Mohammed Alrifai Y1 - 2024/06/14 PY - 2024 N1 - https://doi.org/10.11648/j.ajese.20240802.13 DO - 10.11648/j.ajese.20240802.13 T2 - American Journal of Environmental Science and Engineering JF - American Journal of Environmental Science and Engineering JO - American Journal of Environmental Science and Engineering SP - 41 EP - 48 PB - Science Publishing Group SN - 2578-7993 UR - https://doi.org/10.11648/j.ajese.20240802.13 AB - Noise pollution affects our health adversely. At hospital, noise can harm health care professionals and patients too. It also affects the performance of the whole staff and therefore, the quality of the delivered services. This study aimed to assess noise levels nurses exposed to and to determine the sources of noise and nurses' complaints about it. A quantitative, descriptive cross sectional study was used. Noise levels at different departments in Palestine Medical Complex (PMC) were measured using an integrating sound level meter. A total of 180 nurses participated in the interviewing questionnaire. The results of the study showed that main sources of noise were: the loud arguments occurred between the health care staff and the relatives/visitors of the patients, loud conversations, the construction work and the renovation in the hospital, patients' crying/shouting, the medical equipment and the staff shouting. The main complaints were discomfort, bad communication, headache, fatigue, stress, irritability, low concentration, inattention, memory problems and noise effect on work efficiency. In most departments, morning shift was the noisiest shift and nurses (61.1%) considered work environment stressful and uncomfortable. Noise levels in all departments exceeded what is recommended by WHO with an average of 64.48 dBA. The minimum value of LAeq was 54.8 dBA in one CCU and the maximum one was 73.5 dBA in NICU. Conclusion: Different noise sources at PMC and many noise complaints were reported by nurses. Noise levels in different departments were above that recommended by WHO. The educational intervention should target nurses and the whole health care staff in order to increase their awareness about noise and to modify their behaviors to reduce it, as well as the effective management of medical devices and machines, repairing devices and physical space arrangement. VL - 8 IS - 2 ER -