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A Hyena (Hypertension and Exposure to Noise Near Airports) study published in 2009 examined the effects of aircraft noise on sleeping subjects.
For example, the cross-sectional HYENA (Hypertension and Exposure to Noise near Airports) study estimated associations of aircraft noise exposure with saliva cortisol in 439 men and women living near major airports in six European countries (Selander et al. 2009a).
The HYENA (Hypertension and Exposure to Noise near Airports) study aimed to assess the relations between noise from aircraft or road traffic near airports and the risk of hypertension.
The objective of the HYENA (Hypertension and Exposure to Noise near Airports) study was to assess the relationships between exposure to noise generated by aircraft and road traffic near airports and the risk of hypertension.
Compared with aircraft noise exposure, for which an association with increased blood pressure has been shown in the HYENA (Hypertension and Exposure to Noise near Airports) study (Jarup et al. 2008), among others (Babisch and Kamp 2009; Eriksson et al. 2007), railway noise has a similar intermittent and disruptive pattern, although it is much lower in A-weighted decibels than is aircraft noise.
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Of the dozen airports studied, 10 reported delaying or canceling capital projects.
A report, commissioned by ministers the last time they considered the option of a major new hub airport on the marshes east of London, found the risk of an "aircraft loss" after being hit by one or more birds was between one plane in 100 years and one plane in 300 years - higher than any of the other 10 major UK airports studied.
28 An airport study at Boston's Logan International Airport found that only 46% of travelers to low/low middle income countries sought pre-travel advice.
This airport study, like much research assessing vaccine uptake, relies on the self-reported history of previous vaccination and is subject to recall bias.
So we used an estimation based on European residents derived from the data of the airport study which was conducted in nine different airports in Europe with passengers residing in Europe and boarding a flight to West Africa [ 12].
The other two scenarios are conducted with an estimation of recourse to malaria chemoprophylaxis of 68.7% and a high estimation of 82.4% stemming from the data of the European airport study [ 12].
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Justyna Jupowicz-Kozak
CEO of Professional Science Editing for Scientists @ prosciediting.com