2006-01-0643 - Pravilnik o varovanju delavcev pred tveganji zaradi izpostavljenosti hrupu pri delu
Pravilnik o varovanju delavcev pred tveganji zaradi izpostavljenosti hrupu pri delu
Pravilnik o varovanju delavcev pred tveganji zaradi izpostavljenosti hrupu pri delu
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Frequently Asked Questions
An EU Regulation is a binding legislative act that must be applied in its entirety across the European Union. Unlike directives, regulations do not need to be transposed into national law and are directly applicable in all member states. Regulations are used when uniform application across all EU countries is essential.
Slovenian Regulation 2006-01-0643 covers "Pravilnik o varovanju delavcev pred tveganji zaradi izpostavljenosti hrupu pri delu". There are 1 standards associated with this slovenian regulation.
Harmonized standards under 2006-01-0643 are European standards (ENs) developed by CEN, CENELEC, or ETSI in response to a mandate from the European Commission. When these standards are cited in the Official Journal of the European Union, products manufactured in conformity with them benefit from a presumption of conformity with the essential requirements of 2006-01-0643, facilitating CE marking and free movement within the European Economic Area.
ISO 1999:2013 specifies a method for calculating the expected noise-induced permanent threshold shift in the hearing threshold levels of adult populations due to various levels and durations of noise exposure; it provides the basis for calculating hearing disability according to various formulae when the hearing threshold levels at commonly measured audiometric frequencies, or combinations of such frequencies, exceed a certain value.
The measure of exposure to noise for a population at risk is the noise exposure level normalized to a nominal 8 h working day, LEX,8h, for a given number of years of exposure. ISO 1999:2013 applies to noise at frequencies less than approximately 10 kHz which is steady, intermittent, fluctuating, irregular. Use of ISO 1999:2013 for sound pressures exceeding 200 Pa (140 dB relative to 20 µPa) is recognized as extrapolation.
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