Many women of childbearing age are occupationally active, which leads to a large number of pregnancies potentially exposed to occupational exposures. Occupational noise has been identified as a risk factor for hearing impairment in adults. However, very few studies have assessed the effect of occupational noise on the fetus.
The aim of this study was to investigate whether occupational exposure to noise during pregnancy is associated with hearing dysfunction in children.
This population based cohort study included 1,422,333 single births in Sweden 1986-2008. Data on mothers' occupation, smoking habits, age, ethnicity, body mass index, leave of absence, and socioeconomic factors were obtained from interviews performed by prenatal care unit staff at approximately 10 weeks of gestation and from national registers. Occupational noise exposure was classified by a job-exposure-matrix as