Title of article
Estimating health related costs and savings from balcony acoustic design for road traffic noise
Author/Authors
Daniel A. Naish، نويسنده , , Andy C.C. Tan، نويسنده , , F. Nur Demirbilek، نويسنده ,
Issue Information
روزنامه با شماره پیاپی سال 2012
Pages
11
From page
497
To page
507
Abstract
A multi-faceted study is conducted with the objective of estimating the potential fiscal savings in annoyance and sleep disturbance related health costs due to providing improved building acoustic design standards. This study uses balcony acoustic treatments in response to road traffic noise as an example. The study area is the State of Queensland in Australia, where regional road traffic noise mapping data is used in conjunction with standard dose–response curves to estimate the population exposure levels. The background and the importance of using the selected road traffic noise indicators are discussed. In order to achieve the objective, correlations between the mapping indicator (LA10 (18 hour)) and the dose response curve indicators (Lden and Lnight) are established via analysis on a large database of road traffic noise measurement data. The existing noise exposure of the study area is used to estimate the fiscal reductions in health related costs through the application of simple estimations of costs per person per year per degree of annoyance or sleep disturbance. The results demonstrate that balcony acoustic treatments may provide a significant benefit towards reducing the health related costs of road traffic noise in a community.
Keywords
Dose–response , Sleep disturbance , Public health , Road traffic noise , Balcony , Noise mapping
Journal title
Applied Acoustics
Serial Year
2012
Journal title
Applied Acoustics
Record number
1171630
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