An independent study conducted by the American Institute of Physics tried to find out whether differences in sound levels occurred near babies who are more/less premature.  Here is the research abstract:

We conducted sound surveys in a large state of the art NICU with six separate rooms devoted to the sickest babies requiring the most intensive care (Level III) and six rooms devoted to babies requiring special but less intensive care (Level II). Each room was capable of caring for up to 8 babies. Additionally, there were 8 individual Isolation rooms. We used Larson Davis Spark squflg 703+ dosimeters to record 21 week long sound surveys, seven in each type of room. The American Academy of Pediatrics (1997) has recommended that sound levels in NICUs should never exceed 45 dB(A). That recommendation was exceeded 73.6% of the time in Level II, 92.1% of the time in Isolation, and 96.6% of the time in Level III. Sound levels were lowest in the Level II rooms especially for the softest sounds recorded (L90 and L70). Level III rooms were noisiest except for the noisiest decile of sound (L10). Isolation rooms were noisiest at the highest sound levels (probably because of their reverberant construction materials and enclosed space). Autocorrelation functions were calculated identifying periodic components in all three rooms at about 12 and 24 hrs. Periodic variations were very small compared to random sound variations.