In this photo of Tuesday, March 5, 2013, a young boy listens to music by sharing an earphone with his mother while riding a New York subway. Add cranked-up earphones to the list of health dangers Mayor Michael Bloomberg wants New Yorkers to quit. City health officials plan to warn young people with a public service campaign that they risk hearing loss from listening to music at high volume on personal music players. (AP Photo/Mark Lennihan)
In this photo of Tuesday, March 5, 2013, a young boy listens to music by sharing an earphone with his mother while riding a New York subway. Add cranked-up earphones to the list of health dangers Mayor Michael Bloomberg wants New Yorkers to quit. City health officials plan to warn young people with a public service campaign that they risk hearing loss from listening to music at high volume on personal music players. (AP Photo/Mark Lennihan)
NEW YORK (AP) ? The city wants young New Yorkers to hear its latest public-health warning loud and clear: Cranked-up headphones can be hazardous to your hearing.
So much so that the city is planning a $250,000 social media and marketing campaign to warn teens that they risk hearing loss from listening to personal music players at high volume, health officials said Wednesday.
It's the latest in a slate of efforts on Mayor Michael Bloomberg's watch to urge New Yorkers to eschew unhealthy habits, from smoking to drinking large amounts of sugary soda. The prodding has sometimes included graphic ads, such as an online video of a man pouring himself a soda that turns into a glass of glop made to look like fat and an ad featuring a close-up of a smoker's gangrenous toes.
It's not yet clear how the city will deliver its hearing-loss messages, which will aim to "to better inform and educate New Yorkers about ways to protect hearing from exposure to loud sounds," particularly long and loud listening sessions on music devices with earphones, the city Health Department said in a statement.
Officials plan to use focus groups and interviews with teens and young adults to decide how to frame the campaign, according to a description from the city Health Department's fundraising arm, called the Fund for Public Health. It has raised $70,000 so far, from a donor who asked to remain anonymous, said the fund's executive director, Sara Gardner.
The plan got mixed reviews Wednesday from headphone users.
Cecilia Sanchez, 17, knows she plays her music loudly through the headphones she wears much of the time ? bus drivers have been known to yell at her to turn it down. But the high school senior finds it relaxing because "it shuts out the whole world," and she doesn't think anyone's going to listen to chiding from city officials.
"You can't really control what people do. I think people get the risks, but they'll do what they want to do. Especially young people," she said.
But it's fine with John Cerini, 38, if the city wants to encourage people to keep their headphone volume down ? partly because he's tired of overhearing other people's music over his own, which he plays at a moderate level on his daily commute between Manhattan and Mineola.
"If it's improving life as a whole, I'm for it," said Cerini, an architect.
Noise-induced hearing loss has been a concern for years amid the cacophony of modern life, with its booming music, traffic sirens, jackhammers and other clatter.
The National Institute on Deafness and Other Communication Disorders says close proximity or prolonged exposure to sound above 85 decibels can cause hearing damage, and many things are louder, including power mowers, motorcycles and, sometimes, music. A personal music player hits about 105 decibels at maximum volume, according to the federal government-run institute.
The federal Centers for Disease Control and Prevention says excessive noise has caused permanent hearing damage in 1 out of 8 children and teens and about 1 in 6 adults under age 70. Problems can include hearing loss ? especially trouble hearing high frequencies or following conversations in noisy situations ? and tinnitus, an internal ringing, whooshing or buzzing in the ears.
The national deafness institute and other health groups have launched public-education campaigns about protecting hearing. The American Speech-Language-Hearing Association sounded a note about safe headphone listening at this year's International CES, the massive consumer electronics-fest that is the biggest trade show in the Americas.
The organizer, the Consumer Electronics Association, didn't immediately respond to phone and email inquiries Wednesday about New York City's new initiative, first reported by the New York Post. But the association supports the audiology group's similar effort, and association President Gary Shapiro has noted that it promotes headphones that minimize outside sounds and allow parents set the maximum volume for the children.
During Bloomberg's 11 years in office, his administration has cracked down on smoking, banned trans fats from restaurant meals, forced chain eateries to post calorie counts on menus and limited the size of some sugary drinks.
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Associated Press writer Jake Pearson contributed to this report.
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