Tinnitus is not only caused by noise exposure, and Sandra does not even exactly know what caused her tinnitus. So again, whose to say it would be the concert versus something else.She wouldn't. However, it would seem that the most loud noise (that one is exposed to for a long time) will be the culprit. Chances are that the loudest noise she will be exposed to for the longest time will happen at that festival.
No. Just no. That is a very poor analogy. Ear plugs offer protection against loud noises. Coffee does not protect against the effects of intoxication.She didn't take precautions - she went to the festival. Wearing earplugs is like a drunk person drinking coffee to stay awake as he or she drives home. I am saying that drinking and driving is reckless, and you are saying that it is not nice for me to say that it is essentially the drunk driver's fault if he or she becomes disabled as a result of a crash.
The more accurate analogy would be a person exhausted after a long shift drinking coffee to try to stay awake, yet falling asleep while driving home. That actually happened to my aunt, and yes I think it would be pretty horrible to blame her for her death.
That is an assumption we're making on this forum. I've yet to have an ENT or audiologist tell me that is true. Nor any of the people I know with 20+ years of tinnitus.The point is that this threshold appears to be lower for T sufferers.
You do realize diabetics can have sugar. They have to monitor their glucose levels. Sometimes it's safe, and sometimes it is not. They take precautions. They know what is safe and when it is safe. So not that unlike tinnitus in that we need to monitor our sound environment and take precautions when necessary.So if you were to get diabetes you would not let it dictate what you can and cannot eat?
The discrepancy is in what we think is safe. If you think earplugs and earmuffs do not protect against sound, that's a different discussion.