Results of Clinical Surveys for Microwave Ocular Effects
Budd Appleton · 1973
Government researchers documented microwave eye damage in humans back in 1973, decades before wireless devices became ubiquitous.
Plain English Summary
This 1973 government report documented clinical surveys examining microwave radiation's effects on human eyes. The research investigated eye-related health problems in people exposed to microwave radiation, likely including military personnel and industrial workers. This early study helped establish the foundation for understanding microwave radiation's impact on one of our most sensitive organs.
Why This Matters
This 1973 government report represents crucial early recognition that microwave radiation poses specific risks to human eyes. The fact that government researchers were conducting clinical surveys on microwave ocular effects five decades ago demonstrates that concerns about this radiation weren't invented by modern health advocates. Your eyes are particularly vulnerable to microwave radiation because they lack the blood circulation needed to dissipate heat effectively, making them similar to a closed system that can overheat.
What makes this research especially relevant today is that microwave frequencies are now everywhere in our daily environment through WiFi routers, cell phones, and wireless devices. While this 1973 study likely examined higher-power occupational exposures, the same biological mechanisms that cause eye damage operate at lower power levels over longer periods. The science demonstrates that your eyes deserve the same protection consideration that prompted government health surveys fifty years ago.
Exposure Information
Specific exposure levels were not quantified in this study.
Show BibTeX
@article{results_of_clinical_surveys_for_microwave_ocular_effects_g5834,
author = {Budd Appleton},
title = {Results of Clinical Surveys for Microwave Ocular Effects},
year = {1973},
}