The radio frequency electromagnetic field as a hygienic factor
Dumanski, I IuD · 1968
Workplace safety experts recognized RF electromagnetic fields as health hazards requiring protective controls back in 1968.
Plain English Summary
This 1968 study examined radio frequency electromagnetic fields as a workplace health factor, investigating their effects on humans and animals. The research focused on establishing hygienic practices and engineering controls to protect workers from RF exposure. This represents early recognition of electromagnetic fields as occupational health hazards requiring safety measures.
Why This Matters
This research from 1968 represents a pivotal moment in EMF health science - the formal recognition that radio frequency fields constitute a workplace hazard requiring protective measures. What's striking is how early researchers understood the need for 'hygienic factors' and 'engineering controls' around RF exposure, decades before cell phones became ubiquitous. The science demonstrates that concerns about electromagnetic field exposure aren't new or fringe - they've been part of occupational health protocols for over 50 years.
What this means for you is that the RF fields your devices emit today operate in the same frequency ranges that workplace safety experts deemed hazardous enough to require protective controls in 1968. Yet modern consumer devices subject you to these same fields without the engineering safeguards that were considered essential in industrial settings decades ago.
Exposure Information
Specific exposure levels were not quantified in this study.
Show BibTeX
@article{the_radio_frequency_electromagnetic_field_as_a_hygienic_factor_g6440,
author = {Dumanski and I IuD},
title = {The radio frequency electromagnetic field as a hygienic factor},
year = {1968},
}