Pulsed Short Wave in Sinus and Allied Conditions in Childhood
Levy H. · 1961
Medicine once confidently used pulsed radiofrequency fields to treat children, highlighting how EMF safety assumptions have evolved.
Plain English Summary
This 1961 study examined the use of pulsed short wave electromagnetic therapy for treating sinusitis and lymph node conditions in children. The research represents early medical applications of radiofrequency fields, documenting therapeutic effects in pediatric patients. This work provides historical context for understanding both beneficial and potentially harmful effects of EMF exposure in developing bodies.
Why This Matters
This research from 1961 offers a fascinating glimpse into medicine's early embrace of electromagnetic fields as therapeutic tools, specifically using pulsed short wave therapy for childhood sinus conditions and lymphadenosis. What makes this particularly relevant to today's EMF health debate is the stark contrast it presents: while doctors were deliberately exposing children to radiofrequency fields for healing, we now have mounting evidence that similar frequencies from wireless devices may pose health risks to developing bodies. The study highlights medicine's historical confidence in EMF safety, paralleling how we once viewed X-rays and other now-regulated technologies. Today's children face involuntary, chronic exposure to similar frequencies from WiFi, cell phones, and other wireless devices at levels that would have been unimaginable in 1961. The therapeutic context of this research doesn't negate concerns about chronic, low-level exposure, but it does underscore how little we understood about EMF's biological effects when we began saturating our environment with these fields.
Exposure Information
Specific exposure levels were not quantified in this study.
Show BibTeX
@article{pulsed_short_wave_in_sinus_and_allied_conditions_in_childhood_g6714,
author = {Levy H.},
title = {Pulsed Short Wave in Sinus and Allied Conditions in Childhood},
year = {1961},
}