CHANGES OF THE BLOOD COMPOSITION FOLLOWING SHORT-TERM EFFECT OF CONSTANT MAGNETIC FIELD ON THE HUMAN ORGANISM
G. A. Stasiuk · 1973
A 1973 study found month-long health improvements in people after single magnetic field exposure at 1850 oersted.
Plain English Summary
Soviet researchers exposed 20 healthy people to a single, short-term magnetic field treatment at 1850 oersted intensity and found positive health changes. Participants experienced improved appetite, mood, normalized blood pressure, and increased red blood cells and hemoglobin levels that lasted up to a month.
Why This Matters
This 1973 Soviet study represents an intriguing piece of the EMF puzzle that challenges our typical focus on potential harms. The magnetic field strength used (1850 oersted, equivalent to about 0.15 Tesla) is substantially stronger than what you encounter from household appliances but weaker than MRI machines. What makes this particularly relevant is the duration of effects - changes lasting a full month from a single exposure suggests our bodies may respond to magnetic fields in ways we're still discovering. While this study predates modern safety standards and lacks the rigorous controls we expect today, it reminds us that the relationship between electromagnetic fields and human biology is complex. The reality is that magnetic field therapy continues to be studied for various health applications, though the mechanisms remain poorly understood.
Exposure Information
Specific exposure levels were not quantified in this study.
Show BibTeX
@article{changes_of_the_blood_composition_following_short_term_effect_of_constant_magneti_g7035,
author = {G. A. Stasiuk},
title = {CHANGES OF THE BLOOD COMPOSITION FOLLOWING SHORT-TERM EFFECT OF CONSTANT MAGNETIC FIELD ON THE HUMAN ORGANISM},
year = {1973},
}