WHO research agenda for radiofrequency fields
Authors not listed · 2011
WHO's 2011 research agenda officially acknowledges major knowledge gaps in radiofrequency health effects across all scientific disciplines.
Plain English Summary
The World Health Organization published a comprehensive research agenda identifying critical gaps in radiofrequency health effects research in 2011. The document prioritizes research needs across epidemiology, human studies, animal studies, cellular mechanisms, and social science areas. This represents WHO's official acknowledgment that significant knowledge gaps exist regarding RF health effects.
Why This Matters
This WHO research agenda represents a pivotal moment in EMF health science. The reality is that when the world's leading health authority publishes a formal research agenda, it's acknowledging substantial gaps in our understanding of health risks. The document's emphasis on high-priority research needs across multiple scientific disciplines demonstrates that the science is far from settled on RF safety. What this means for you is that the technologies you use daily - cell phones, WiFi, wireless devices - are operating in a landscape where even WHO recognizes we need much more research to understand potential health effects. The agenda's inclusion of social science research also acknowledges that public perception and risk communication are critical components of this issue.
Exposure Information
Specific exposure levels were not quantified in this study.
Show BibTeX
@article{who_research_agenda_for_radiofrequency_fields_ce733,
author = {Unknown},
title = {WHO research agenda for radiofrequency fields},
year = {2011},
doi = {10.1002/bem.20660},
}