Report on the Applicability of International Radiation Protection Recommendations in the Nordic Countries
B Lindell · 1976
Nordic countries coordinated ionizing radiation protection standards in 1976, demonstrating international cooperation possible for electromagnetic safety.
Plain English Summary
This 1976 technical report by B Lindell examined ionizing radiation protection standards and practices across five Nordic countries: Denmark, Finland, Iceland, Norway, and Sweden. The study analyzed how these nations implemented international radiation protection recommendations and coordinated their regulatory approaches. While focused on ionizing radiation rather than EMF, this work represents early efforts to harmonize radiation safety standards across national boundaries.
Why This Matters
This Nordic collaboration on radiation protection from 1976 offers valuable historical perspective on how nations can coordinate safety standards for electromagnetic exposures. The reality is that ionizing radiation and non-ionizing EMF both pose health risks, yet we've seen far more international cooperation on ionizing radiation protection than on EMF safety standards. The Nordic countries' early coordination on radiation protection demonstrates that unified safety standards are possible when there's political will.
What this means for you is that the fragmented approach to EMF regulation we see today isn't inevitable. The science demonstrates that EMF exposures carry health risks, yet unlike ionizing radiation, we lack coordinated international standards for wireless radiation exposure limits. This 1976 Nordic model shows how countries can work together to protect public health from electromagnetic exposures.
Exposure Information
Specific exposure levels were not quantified in this study.
Show BibTeX
@article{report_on_the_applicability_of_international_radiation_protection_recommendation_g5779,
author = {B Lindell},
title = {Report on the Applicability of International Radiation Protection Recommendations in the Nordic Countries},
year = {1976},
}