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Problems with Current SystemsData difficult to integrate to assess program effectiveness
 | Are the right employees identified?
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 | Are we preventing hearing loss?
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 | Are fewer employees at risk?
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 | Are noise controls working?
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 | Are we in compliance?
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 | What are its weaknesses?
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 | What are its strengths?
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 | What are the barriers to improvement? |
Notes:

I would say that even in the better run hearing conservation programs, very few companies know whether the at-risk workers have been identified. Monitoring is not really being done with sufficent resolution to know for certain if all at risk workers are included in the hearing conservation process. We dont know whether we are really preventing hearing loss and we dont know whether the workers are impaired.
Can we say whether fewer workers are at risk today than 10 years ago? We dont know whether the noise controls are really working to reduce hearing loss. We arent sure whether we are in compliance because OSHA has provided very little guidance. We dont know the weaknesses or strengths of our programs. And, in most cases we have not even begun to understand what the barriers are to making the program better.
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