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- Elizabeth B Brokaw, S BrungartDouglasDWalter Reed National Military Medical Center, Bethesda, MD 20814, USA., Ryan M Byrne, Greg A Flamme, Raj Gupta, Charles R Jokel, Sharon G Kujawa, Lisa Lalis, Richard L McKinley, William J Murphy, Rachel W Spencer, J SmaltChristopherCMassachusetts Institute of Technology Lincoln Laboratory, 244 Wood St, Lexington, Massachusetts 02421, USA., and Brissi F Zagadou.
- The MITRE Corporation, McLean, VA 22102, USA.
- Mil Med. 2023 Nov 8; 188 (Suppl 6): 176184176-184.
IntroductionAlthough existing auditory injury prevention standards benefit warfighters, the Department of Defense could do more to understand and address auditory injuries (e.g., hearing loss, tinnitus, and central processing deficits) among service members. The Blast Injury Prevention Standards Recommendation (BIPSR) Process is designed to address the needs of all the Military Services for biomedically valid Military Health System (MHS) Blast Injury Prevention Standards.Materials And MethodsThrough the BIPSR Process, stakeholders provided their intended uses and requested functionalities for an MHS Blast Injury Prevention Standard. The BIPSR Process established a broad-based, non-advocacy panel of auditory injury Subject Matter Expert (SME) Panel with members drawn from industry, academia, and government. The SME Panel selected evaluation factors, weighted priorities, and then evaluated the resulting candidate MHS Auditory Blast Injury Prevention Standards against the evaluation criteria. The SME Panel members provided rationales for their decisions, documented discussions, and used iterative rounds of feedback to promote consensus building among members. The BIPSR Process used multi-attribute utility theory to combine members' evaluations and compare the candidate standards.ResultsThe SME Panel identified and collated information about existing auditory injury datasets to identify gaps and promote data sharing and comprehensive evaluations of standards for preventing auditory blast injury. The panel evaluated the candidate standards and developed recommendations for an MHS Blast Injury Prevention Standard.ConclusionsThe BIPSR Process illuminated important characteristics, capabilities, and limitations of candidate standards and existing datasets (e.g., limited human exposure data to evaluate the validity of injury prediction) for auditory blast injury prevention. The evaluation resulted in the recommendation to use the 8-hour Equivalent Level (LAeq8hr) as the interim MHS Auditory Blast Injury Prevention Standard while the community performs additional research to fill critical knowledge gaps.© The Association of Military Surgeons of the United States 2023. All rights reserved. For permissions, please e-mail: journals.permissions@oup.com.
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