LASER HEALTH HAZARDS CONTROL
Authors not listed · 1969
The 1969 Air Force laser safety manual shows military recognition of EMF health risks predated civilian wireless concerns by decades.
Plain English Summary
This 1969 Air Force manual established safety protocols for personnel working with laser equipment in military and aerospace settings. The document provided guidance for reducing unnecessary laser radiation exposure and protecting workers from potential health hazards. This represents one of the earliest institutional acknowledgments of electromagnetic radiation health risks in occupational settings.
Why This Matters
What makes this 1969 Air Force manual significant is its timing and institutional authority. The military was among the first organizations to formally recognize that electromagnetic radiation from lasers posed health risks requiring protective protocols. This wasn't theoretical concern but practical necessity based on observed effects. The reality is that military and aerospace applications often push technology boundaries first, revealing health impacts that civilian populations encounter years later. The Air Force's proactive approach to laser safety contrasts sharply with today's regulatory response to wireless radiation, where consumer exposure guidelines lag decades behind the technology deployment.
Exposure Information
Specific exposure levels were not quantified in this study.
Show BibTeX
@article{laser_health_hazards_control_g4759,
author = {Unknown},
title = {LASER HEALTH HAZARDS CONTROL},
year = {1969},
}