BIOMEDICAL APPLICATIONS OF MICROWAVE RADIATION
Lawrence E. Larsen, John H. Jacobi · 1980
Medical researchers recognized microwave radiation's biological effects as early as 1980, highlighting the technology's double-edged therapeutic and exposure potential.
Plain English Summary
This 1980 Washington course was designed to educate biological scientists about microwave and radio-frequency radiation applications in medicine and research. The program aimed to bridge the gap between biomedical researchers and microwave system engineers in developing new medical technologies. It represents early recognition of microwave radiation's potential as both a diagnostic sensor and therapeutic tool in healthcare.
Why This Matters
This 1980 educational initiative reveals how the medical establishment was actively pursuing microwave radiation applications decades before widespread public concern about EMF health effects emerged. The reality is that while researchers were exploring therapeutic uses of these frequencies, the same biological interactions that make microwaves useful in medicine also raise questions about unintended health consequences from everyday exposure. What this means for you is that the medical community has long understood that microwave radiation produces measurable biological effects - the ongoing debate centers on whether chronic, low-level exposures from wireless devices produce harmful outcomes. The science demonstrates that biological systems respond to these frequencies in ways that can be both beneficial in controlled medical settings and potentially problematic with continuous environmental exposure.
Exposure Information
Specific exposure levels were not quantified in this study.
Show BibTeX
@article{biomedical_applications_of_microwave_radiation_g4085,
author = {Lawrence E. Larsen and John H. Jacobi},
title = {BIOMEDICAL APPLICATIONS OF MICROWAVE RADIATION},
year = {1980},
}