Physical Medicine in Podiatry: A New Concept
Jerome J. Erman · 1970
1970 medical research explored high-frequency electromagnetic radiation as therapeutic treatment, decades before EMF health concerns emerged.
Plain English Summary
This 1970 study explored using electromagnetic radiation, specifically high-frequency energy devices like Diapulse, as therapeutic tools in podiatry practice. The research examined how radiofrequency electromagnetic fields could be applied as physical medicine treatments for foot and ankle conditions. This represents early medical investigation into therapeutic EMF applications decades before widespread concern about EMF health effects.
Why This Matters
This study represents a fascinating historical perspective on electromagnetic fields in medicine. In 1970, researchers were actively exploring how to harness RF energy for healing, using devices that delivered high-frequency electromagnetic radiation for therapeutic purposes. The irony is striking: while modern medicine increasingly recognizes EMF as a potential health concern, earlier practitioners sought to weaponize these same frequencies for treatment.
What makes this particularly relevant today is understanding the power levels involved. Therapeutic EMF devices typically operate at much higher intensities than everyday exposures from phones or WiFi. Yet this research preceded our current understanding of EMF bioeffects by decades. The science demonstrates that electromagnetic fields can indeed interact with biological systems in measurable ways - the question has always been whether those interactions help or harm us.
Exposure Information
Specific exposure levels were not quantified in this study.
Show BibTeX
@article{physical_medicine_in_podiatry_a_new_concept_g3975,
author = {Jerome J. Erman},
title = {Physical Medicine in Podiatry: A New Concept},
year = {1970},
}