Placeholder Image

Subtitles section Play video

  • Losing any portion of your hearing through your everyday work can affect your

  • whole lifeif you need to pay for treatment or gadgets to help you live normally,

  • you may be able to make a compensation claim. Industrial deafness can also

  • be known as noise-induced hearing loss or occupational deafness

  • and usually comes about after a long period of working in an environment where

  • noise is above a tolerable level. According to the 2005

  • Control of Noise at Work Regulations, if there is a consistent noise level

  • about 80 dB, your employer should look into reducing

  • it or providing you with ear protection. To put that number into context, it's like

  • standing at the back of the platform when a freight train runs through a station,

  • which may not seem too bad, but if it's consistent for an eight-hour shift,

  • five days a week for many years, it will take a toll on your hearing.

  • You don't have to be totally deaf before you can make a claim for damages

  • even mild deafness can warrant some compensation.

  • You might notice this if you find you're missing parts of conversations, have to turn the

  • TV up or aren't able to hear in noisy environments. If you recognise these

  • conditions or have experienced worse after working in a noisy environment

  • for a long period of time you may be able to make an industrial deafness

  • claim

  • To find out more about receiving compensation, call us on

  • 0845 676 9228 or visit handleylaw.co.uk.

Losing any portion of your hearing through your everyday work can affect your

Subtitles and vocabulary

Click the word to look it up Click the word to find further inforamtion about it