ST. LOUIS — Shhhooo. Wee-uuu. Chick, chick, chick. That’s the sound of three different cicada species. For some people, those sounds are the song of the summer. Others wish the insects would turn it down. The cacophony can be especially irritating for people on the autism spectrum who have hearing sensitivity.

Warren Rickly, 14, lives in suburban south St. Louis County, Mo. Warren, who has autism, was at the bus stop recently waiting for his younger brother when the sound of cicadas became too much to bear.

“He said it sounds like there’s always a train running next to him,” his mother, Jamie Reed, said.

Warren told her the noise hurt.

Starting this spring, trillions of the red-eyed insects crawled their way out of the ground across the Midwest and Southeast. It’s part of a rare simultaneous emergence of two broods — one that appears every 13 years, the other every 17.

The noisy insects can be stressful. People with autism can have a sensitivity to texture, brightness, and sound.

“I think the difference for individuals with autism is the level of intensity or how upsetting some of these sensory differences are,” said Dr. Rachel Follmer, a developmental and behavioral pediatrician at Lurie Children’s Hospital in Chicago.

“It can get to the extreme where it can cause physical discomfort,” she said.

When a large group of cicadas starts to sing, the chorus can be as loud as a motorcycle. Researchers at the University of Missouri-St. Louis this year crowdsourced cicada noise levels as high as 86 decibels, about as loud as a food blender.

That can be stressful, not melodic, Follmer said.

To help children cope, she suggests giving them a primer before they encounter a noisy situation. For cicadas, that could mean explaining what they are, that they don’t bite or sting, and that they’ll be here for just a short time.

“When something is uncomfortable, not having power in that situation can be very scary for a lot of individuals, whether you're on the spectrum or not,” Follmer said.

Jamie Reed’s family has been using this and other strategies to help her son. Warren wears noise-canceling headphones, listens to music, and has been teaching himself about cicadas.

“For him, researching it and looking into it, I think, grounds him a little bit,” Reed said.

Tinnitus problems, too

Fatima Husain is a professor and neuroscientist at the University of Illinois Urbana-Champaign and studies how the brain processes sound. She said people with tinnitus may also struggle with cicada song.

Tinnitus, a ringing or other noise in the ears, is a person’s perception of sound without an external source.

“Some people say it sounds like buzzing, like wind blowing through trees, and ironically, quite a few people say it sounds like cicadas,” Husain said.

For most people with tinnitus the cicada’s song is harmless background noise, according to Husain, but for others the ringing can prevent easy conversation or sleep. Those with tinnitus are also more likely to have anxiety or depression. A loud persistent sound, like singing cicadas, can make someone’s tinnitus worse, Husain said.

It’s not always bad, though. The cicadas' song can also be a relief.

For some, tinnitus gets worse in a quiet environment. Husain said she’s seen reports this year of patients saying the cicadas’ song has been like soothing white noise.

“The sound is loud enough that in some ways it's drowning their internal tinnitus,” Husain said.

No lasting damage

As loud as the cicadas can be, they won’t necessarily damage anyone’s hearing, according to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention. Hearing loss builds up over time from repeated exposure to loud sounds. Cicadas aren’t loud enough for long enough to do lasting damage, Husain said.

Everyday sources of noise come with a higher risk. Husain said constant exposure to loud highways, an airport, industrial sites, or household appliances like blenders and hair dryers can be a concern. And they can take a toll on someone’s emotional well-being.

“If you are being exposed to very loud sounds for a part of your school day or your working day, it may make you more stressed out; it may make you more angry about things,” she said.

Unlike the highway or an airport, cicadas won’t be around long. Most of the current brood will be gone in the next few weeks. Just in time for another noisy summer event: the Fourth of July.

KFF Health News is a national newsroom that produces in-depth journalism about health issues and is one of the core operating programs at KFF.

Copyright 2024 KFF Health News

Transcript

JUANA SUMMERS, HOST:

Trillions of red-eyed cicadas are out across the Southeast and Midwest. They may be the song of the summer, but some wish the insects would just, well, turn it down. They can be especially irritating for people on the autism spectrum with hearing sensitivity, and a rare double brood of cicadas around St. Louis has been making a lot of noise. Reporter Zach Dyer with our partner KFF Health News has the story.

(SOUNDBITE OF CICADAS BUZZING)

KASEY FOWLER-FINN: Let's see. We can go over here.

ZACH DYER: To get a lesson in Cicada appreciation, I met up with Kasey Fowler-Finn. She's a biology professor at St. Louis University.

FOWLER-FINN: If you're not used to listening to insects sing, it might just sound like a big cacophony. But if you listen close, you can hear all the subtleties of the different species, which is pretty cool.

DYER: It's hot in this field outside the city, but the cicadas don't mind.

FOWLER-FINN: They really need it to be quite hot to sing. So on hotter days, you're going to hear more cicadas.

DYER: Fowler-Finn gives me her best impersonation of the three species most common around here.

FOWLER-FINN: (Vocalizing).

DYER: Put them all together, and you get a chorus.

(SOUNDBITE OF CICADAS BUZZING)

DYER: But for those with hearing sensitivity, it can be an overwhelming wall of sound. Back in St. Louis, Jamie Reed has a 14-year-old son with autism. She says the cicadas have been a struggle for him.

JAMIE REED: He said the noise hurts. The way he described it to me, he said it sounds like there's always a train running next to him.

RACHEL FOLLMER: I'm not surprised.

DYER: That's Rachel Follmer. She's a pediatrician who treats many children with autism at Lurie Children's Hospital in Chicago.

FOLLMER: When something is uncomfortable or difficult, sensory-wise, for individuals with autism, it can be very upsetting.

DYER: Follmer says if a child with autism is having a hard time, parents can walk them through what to expect.

FOLLMER: So, you know, we're going to go outside. And when you go outside, it might be louder than normal. That might make you feel, like, nervous. That might hurt your ears. And then give examples of what you can do moving forward from that.

DYER: Like listening to music with headphones or wearing ear plugs. Reed's family has been using a combination of these strategies with her son - and another one - learning more about cicadas.

REED: Looking into it, I think, grounds him a little bit in knowing this is temporary. This is kind of a once-in-a-lifetime-for-his-young-age thing. I think those kind of facts really help kids like that.

DYER: You don't have to have a hearing sensitivity or be on the autism spectrum to think the cicadas are too noisy. Follmer says, in the suburbs, where there are a lot of them, people don't want to go outside.

FOLLMER: Their kids don't want to do it. They don't want to do it because it's not an enjoyable experience with, like, how loud it is. And those are for individuals who are not on the spectrum.

DYER: Cicadas can get as loud as a lawnmower or a motorcycle. But Fatima Husain says they're unlikely to damage your hearing. She's a professor and neuroscientist at the University of Illinois Urbana-Champaign. There are all sorts of other things that are louder than cicadas that we take for granted. Think persistent noise from highways, airports, even hair salons. She says that kind of noise pollution, over several hours, can take a toll on our ears and our emotional health.

FATIMA HUSAIN: If you are being exposed to very loud sounds for a part of your school day or your working day, it may make you more stressed out. It may make you more angry about things.

DYER: The loud airport is here to stay, but the cicadas aren't. Most of this brood will be gone in the next few weeks, just in time for another noisy summer event - the Fourth of July. I'm Zach Dyer in St. Louis.

SUMMERS: That is Zach Dyer with our partner KFF Health News. Transcript provided by NPR, Copyright NPR.

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