BIOLOGICAL EFFECTS OF RADIOFREQUENCY ELECTROMAGNETIC FIELDS
Z. V. Gordon, Editor · 1974
Soviet researchers documented EMF health effects decades before Western science acknowledged them, establishing stricter safety standards.
Plain English Summary
This 1974 Soviet report compiled extensive research on radiofrequency electromagnetic field effects on human health, including workplace exposure standards and biological mechanisms. The study represented early comprehensive documentation of EMF health effects from behind the Iron Curtain. It provided foundational data on how electromagnetic fields interact with biological systems.
Why This Matters
This Soviet report stands as a landmark document in EMF research history, emerging at a time when Western science was largely dismissing biological effects of non-ionizing radiation. The reality is that Soviet researchers were documenting health impacts decades before similar concerns gained traction in Western countries. What makes this particularly significant is that Soviet occupational health standards for EMF exposure were often 100 times more stringent than Western standards, suggesting they were observing real biological effects that Western regulatory agencies chose to ignore. The science demonstrates that this early research laid crucial groundwork for understanding EMF bioeffects, though much of it remained inaccessible to Western researchers for years due to Cold War barriers.
Exposure Information
Specific exposure levels were not quantified in this study.
Show BibTeX
@article{biological_effects_of_radiofrequency_electromagnetic_fields_g7338,
author = {Z. V. Gordon and Editor},
title = {BIOLOGICAL EFFECTS OF RADIOFREQUENCY ELECTROMAGNETIC FIELDS},
year = {1974},
}