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A worker is exposed to noise levels of 95 dB for 6 hours during a shift. According to OSHA's permissible exposure limits, is this exposure acceptable?

Correct Answer

B) No, exposure time must be reduced to 4 hours

OSHA's permissible exposure limit for 95 dB is 4 hours. At 6 hours of exposure, this exceeds the allowable time and requires either noise reduction or limiting exposure time to 4 hours.

Answer Options
A
Yes, it's within acceptable limits
B
No, exposure time must be reduced to 4 hours
C
No, exposure time must be reduced to 2 hours
D
Yes, but hearing protection is recommended

Why This Is the Correct Answer

OSHA's permissible exposure limits establish specific time limits for different noise levels to protect worker hearing. At 95 dB, the maximum allowable exposure time is 4 hours per 8-hour shift. Since the worker is exposed for 6 hours, this exceeds the permissible limit by 2 hours. The exposure must be reduced to comply with OSHA standards, making option B correct.

Why the Other Options Are Wrong

Option A: Yes, it's within acceptable limits

This is incorrect because 6 hours of exposure at 95 dB exceeds OSHA's permissible exposure limit of 4 hours for this noise level.

Option C: No, exposure time must be reduced to 2 hours

While 2 hours would be safer, OSHA specifically allows up to 4 hours of exposure at 95 dB, so reducing to only 2 hours is more restrictive than required.

Option D: Yes, but hearing protection is recommended

This is incorrect because the exposure exceeds OSHA limits regardless of hearing protection recommendations - the time limit must be enforced.

Memory Technique

Use the '5-and-Half' rule: every 5 dB increase cuts exposure time in half. Start with 90 dB = 8 hours, then 95 dB = 4 hours, 100 dB = 2 hours, 105 dB = 1 hour.

Reference Hint

OSHA 29 CFR 1926.95 - Personal Protective Equipment, Table D-2 Permissible Noise Exposures

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