The problem of the influence of UHF fields on specific functions in women working with UHF generators
Palladin AM · 1962
Soviet researchers studied UHF generator effects on women workers in 1962, showing early scientific concern about occupational electromagnetic exposure and reproductive health.
Plain English Summary
This 1962 Soviet research examined how ultra-high frequency (UHF) electromagnetic fields affected specific biological functions in women working with UHF generators in industrial settings. The study focused on occupational exposure patterns and reproductive health concerns in female workers. This represents early scientific recognition that workplace EMF exposure could have gender-specific biological effects.
Why This Matters
This pioneering 1962 study deserves attention because it represents some of the earliest systematic research into occupational EMF exposure and women's health. The fact that Soviet researchers were investigating UHF effects on female workers over 60 years ago shows that concerns about electromagnetic field impacts on reproductive health have deep scientific roots. What makes this particularly relevant today is that UHF frequencies (300 MHz to 3 GHz) now saturate our daily environment through WiFi, cell phones, and wireless devices. While we don't have the specific findings from this study, the research focus on 'specific functions' in women workers suggests investigators were looking at reproductive or hormonal effects. The reality is that today's wireless technology exposes all of us to similar frequencies that once concerned occupational health researchers enough to conduct formal studies.
Exposure Information
Specific exposure levels were not quantified in this study.
Show BibTeX
@article{the_problem_of_the_influence_of_uhf_fields_on_specific_functions_in_women_workin_g6388,
author = {Palladin AM},
title = {The problem of the influence of UHF fields on specific functions in women working with UHF generators},
year = {1962},
}