I'm not sure why I was targeted about this via a sponsored ad, but I was, and so I clicked on it out of curiosity. I couldn't believe there was a company promoting raves for toddlers and I wondered whether the noise levels were being considered as there was no mention of this on the promotional video. In fact, I cringed as I watched the promo.
I looked a little further and couldn't find any information that explicitly stated what decibel levels they restrict the sound to. All I managed to find - via their website - was a comment saying that the noise levels are safe. This idea still seems rather stupid to me because a room full of hundreds/thousands of people will certainly get loud, so how loud does the music have to be to be heard above the ambient noise? And why don't they just state what levels of noise they are exposing the babies' ears to with a decibel figure?
People are also very uneducated when it comes to the risks of noise exposure, particularly on children's hearing which is known to be more sensitive. Are they safeguarding people from standing next to the loudspeakers whilst they hold their babies in the air, for example?
I have so many questions about this. Maybe I've got it all wrong and they really are on top of noise safety.
Here's the promo:
I looked a little further and couldn't find any information that explicitly stated what decibel levels they restrict the sound to. All I managed to find - via their website - was a comment saying that the noise levels are safe. This idea still seems rather stupid to me because a room full of hundreds/thousands of people will certainly get loud, so how loud does the music have to be to be heard above the ambient noise? And why don't they just state what levels of noise they are exposing the babies' ears to with a decibel figure?
People are also very uneducated when it comes to the risks of noise exposure, particularly on children's hearing which is known to be more sensitive. Are they safeguarding people from standing next to the loudspeakers whilst they hold their babies in the air, for example?
I have so many questions about this. Maybe I've got it all wrong and they really are on top of noise safety.
Here's the promo: