Effects of Nonionizing Electromagnetic Radiation
Authors not listed · 1979
Government scientists were documenting biological effects of electromagnetic radiation across multiple disciplines four decades before wireless technology exploded.
Plain English Summary
This 1979 government report compiled early research on nonionizing electromagnetic radiation effects across multiple scientific disciplines. The comprehensive review covered aerospace medicine, environmental health, toxicology, and behavioral sciences during the early era of EMF research. It represents one of the first systematic attempts to catalog potential biological effects of electromagnetic fields.
Why This Matters
This 1979 report marks a pivotal moment in EMF research history - government agencies were already recognizing the need to systematically study electromagnetic radiation's biological effects decades before smartphones became ubiquitous. The fact that this comprehensive review spanned everything from aerospace medicine to behavioral science shows early researchers understood EMF exposure could affect multiple body systems simultaneously. What's particularly striking is the timing: this was published when most people's primary EMF exposure came from power lines and early electronics, yet scientists were already documenting concerning biological effects. Today's exponentially higher exposures from wireless devices, WiFi networks, and 5G infrastructure dwarf what researchers were studying in 1979, making their early warnings even more relevant to our current health landscape.
Exposure Information
Specific exposure levels were not quantified in this study.
Show BibTeX
@article{effects_of_nonionizing_electromagnetic_radiation_g4630,
author = {Unknown},
title = {Effects of Nonionizing Electromagnetic Radiation},
year = {1979},
}