Powerline
Frequency Electromagnetic Fields and Human Health -
Is
it the time to end further research?
|
An
Overview of Three Recent Studies
- D. Maisch 1,
B. Rapley 2.1
Abstract:
- On March 2nd of
this year the results of a study by the Royal Adelaide Hospital were
released which found, "No Evidence for Cancer Link with Powerlines",
and has been quoted as confirmation that it "should be of
great peace of mind to the many thousands of people who live near or
under powerlines."
On July 3rd 1997 The
U.S. National Cancer Institute's Linet study was released which "found
no evidence that magnetic fields (EMFs) in the home increase the risk for
the most common form of childhood cancer.
- On October 31st.
1996 the U.S. National Academy of Sciences, National Research Council
issued a review of the EMF literature and concluded that "there
is no conclusive and consistent evidence showing that exposure to residential
electric and magnetic fields produces cancer, adverse neurobehavioral
effects, or reproductive and developmental defects."
- .
- Largely on the
basis of these three studies, there are calls in Australia and the U.S.
to put an end to further research into the possible adverse biological
effects from human exposure to powerline frequency EMFs.
- .
- However, a careful
examination of the limitations of these three studies does not support
this conclusion.
- .
- Introduction:
- .
- One of the more
contentious issues in the scientific community today is that of the
biological effects of electromagnetic fields (EMFs) and whether or not
they are adversely affecting our health. This issue has caused much
concern and controversy, which largely dates from 1979 when Epidemiologist
Nancy Wertheimer et al reported a link between powerline magnetic
fields and childhood leukemia in Denver Colorado. Many epidemiological
studies since that time have reported a statistically significant connection
with magnetic field exposure and cancer, while other studies do not
report such a correlation.
- .
- Many people who
have been following this issue for the last few years would have some
justification in thinking that recent studies have "concluded"
that there are no health hazards associated with human exposure to electromagnetic
fields (EMF) generated from our use of electric power.
- .
- A brief examination
of media reporting and press releases from several recent scientific
studies would certainly indicate that the possible dangers from powerline
EMF exposure have been overstated and perhaps it is time to direct research
funding into other areas.
- .
- For example:
- .
- 1) The Royal
Adelaide Hospital ELF Mice Study (1998)
- .
- In March of 1998
the American scientific journal Radiation Research published
the results of the Royal Adelaide Hospital ELF mice study, titled; A
Test of Lymphoma Induction by Long-Term Exposure of Eu-Pim 1 Transgenic
Mice to 50 Hz Magnetic Fields . In this study, which looked at 50
Hertz powerline frequency magnetic fields, five groups of approximately
120 mice per group were exposed to different levels of magnetic field
strengths:
- .
- 0 milliGauss (mG)
(Sham exposure group), 1, 100, 1,000, 10,000 and pulsed 10,000 milliGauss.
( 1 )
- .
- On March 2, 1998
the Centenary Institute of Cancer Medicine and Cell Biology issued a
press release on the findings from the Royal Adelaide Hospital ELF mice
study:
- .
- "No evidence
for Cancer Link with Powerlines - No increase in incidence of a cancer
of the immune system called Lymphoma was detected in mice after prolonged
exposure to magnetic fields of the type emitted by electric power lines
and equipment."
- .
- Professor Tony
Basten, Chairman of the research team, said in an interview with the
Sydney Morning Herald:
- .
- "In view
of the earlier reports of a possible association between proximity to
powerlines and incidence of childhood leukemia, a close relative of
lymphoma, our clear cut negative results should be very reassuring,"
said Professor Basten, [it] "supports other carefully conducted
studies showing no measurable increase in cancer risk and really should
be of great peace of mind to the many thousands of people who live near
or under powerlines." (2)
- .
- 2) The
NCI, Linet Study, 1997
- .
- On Friday July
4, 1997 both The Australian and The Sydney Morning Herald
featured articles about the U.S. National Cancer Institute's Linet study,
which found that there was no evidence that powerline electromagnetic
fields increase childhood leukemia risks. This study was published on
July 3rd in the New England Journal of Medicine. (3)
- The researchers
compared magnetic field exposures of 638 children with leukemia and
620 children without leukemia who were similar in age and race.
- To quote from the
National Cancer Institute's Press release, dated July 2, 1997:
- .
- "A comprehensive
study by researchers from the National Cancer Institute (NCI) and the
Children's Cancer Group (CCG) found no evidence that magnetic fields
(EMFs) in the home increase the risk for the most common form of childhood
cancer."
- .
- In this case-control
study, the researchers found that in general, children who lived in
homes with high measured magnetic fields were not significantly more
likely to be diagnosed with acute lymphoblastic leukemia (ALL) than
children living in homes with lower magnetic field levels. Nor was ALL
found to be more likely among those whose homes were classified in high
categories of "wire-code," a surrogate measure of magnetic
fields that is based on the thickness, configuration, and distance from
the home of nearby power lines."
- .
- As reported in
the February 1998 issue of EMF Update, published by the Electricity
Supply Association of Australia:
- .
- " A major
scientific study published in the 3 July edition (1997) of the New England
Journal of Medicine reported no statistically significant correlation
between magnetic field exposure in the home and the incidence of childhood
leukemia."
- .
- Don MacPhee from
LaTrobe University's school of microbiology stated in The Australian
that the results of the NCI Study backed his claims that power lines
did not emit enough energy to cause childhood cancer or any other form
of cancer. Mac Phee said that it was mostly the media, and scientists
of "Dubious Quality", that had perpetuated the myth
that there was any link between power lines and cancer. "Its
just absolute non-sense", Dr. McPhee said. (4)
- .
- 3) The NAS/NRC
Report, 1996
- .
- On October 31st,
1996, the US National Academy of Sciences, National Research Council
(NAS/NRC) issued a review of the EMF literature: Possible Health
Effects of Exposure to Residential Electric and Magnetic Fields.
The conclusions of this report are that "there is no conclusive
and consistent evidence showing that exposure to residential electric
and magnetic fields produces cancer, adverse neurobehavioral effects,
or reproductive and developmental defects".
- .
- Of significant
importance are the words, "conclusive and consistent". Like
the more familiar phrase in law, "beyond reasonable doubt",
"conclusive and consistent" implies a certain standard of
evidence that warrants more serious action. Using that type of reasoning,
the NRC Committee concluded that research results do not show that EMF
exposure at a residential environmental level causes adverse health
effects. (5)
- .
- According to the
newsletter EMF Health Report, (Nov/Dec 1996) published by the
U. S. based Information Ventures: "The findings to date do not
support claims that EMFs are harmful to a person's health,"
said Dr. Charles Stevens of the Salk Institute, who was the chair of
the NRC Committee that wrote the report.
- .
- The official NRC/NAS
news release headline states: "No Adverse Health Effects Seen
From Residential Exposure to Electromagnetic Fields."
- .
- In the Electrical
Supply Association of Australia's (ESAA) newsletter EMF Update
of January 1997, it is reported:
- .
- "In an
extensive review of the scientific literature relating to the possible
health effects of exposure to residential electric and magnetic fields
the (NAS) concluded that "the current body of evidence does not
show that exposure to these fields presents a human-health hazard"
NAS appointed an expert committee of 16 scientists to review 17 years
of research . . . in hundreds of studies on three continents. The present
report is the result of that effort . . . It (the NAS report) is an
important benchmark document in the history of the EMF scientific debate
against which future research findings will need to be viewed."
- .
- As a result of
the "not guilty" verdict from the National Academy of Sciences
and the National Cancer Institute, the US Department of Energy (DOE)
is ending practically all bio-electromagnetic research in September
1998, and there is the likelihood that the US House of Representatives
and the Senate will drastically cut the budget for future research.
- .
- Acting on the press
releases from both the NCI and NAS studies, the Victorian Radiation
Advisory Committee, in its annual report to the Victorian Parliament
for 1997 stated:
- .
- ". . .
However, the weight of opinion as expressed in the US National Academy
of Sciences report and the negative results from the National Cancer
Institute study (Linet et al 1997) would seem to shift the balance of
probability more towards there being no identifiable health risks (6)
- .
- Considering that
the U.S. National Academy of Science, the U.S. National Cancer Institute
and other organisations have made the above statements on the EMF health
debate, it would seem quite reasonable to conclude that at long last
we have settled this issue.
- HOWEVER, before
any firm conclusions can be drawn, let's go back and carefully reexamine
the three studies mentioned above to see if the press releases and media
statements on safety are really reflected in the study findings themselves.
- .
- 4) The Royal
Adelaide Hospital ELF Mice Study (1998)-Limitations
- .
- One important admission
of the authors of this study, and one which should have been mentioned
in the press release, is the following:
- .
- "Perhaps
the increased incidence of cancer, that in some epidemiological studies
has been associated with residential proximity to high-current power-distribution
wiring, results from exposure to high-frequency transients rather that
the primary 50/60 Hz magnetic fields. Transients originate from the
operation of devices such as light switches, electronic controllers
and electric motors during start up. They are of short duration (<1
s) and have frequencies peaking in the megahertz range and intensities
up to several microtesla. . .
- In our study,
the magnetic fields to which the mice were exposed were switched on
and off in a manner that minimized the production of transients. Thus
the possible carcinogenic consequences of exposure to transients have
yet to be tested." (7)
- .
- This statement
is in conflict with the statement in the official press release where
it is claimed, "No increase in incidence of a cancer of the
immune system called Lymphoma was detected in mice after prolonged exposure
to magnetic fields of the type emitted by electric power lines and
equipment."
- .
- The researchers
had understandable reasons for filtering out the possible effect of
transients, as this could have been a possible confounder if a positive
result was found. That is; if transients were not filtered out and an
effect was found, they would not know if it was the 50 Hz magnetic field
or the transients that were responsible. Therefore they decided to eliminate
one for the purposes of the study. However by doing so the relevance
for real world exposures is severely limited, as the following indicates:
- .
- Transients
- .
- Quoted from the
paper "How You Can Avoid or Eliminate Pulsing Electric or Magnetic
Fields within Your Home and Bedroom" by James B. Beal, EMF
Interface Consulting, 5500 Prytania, #406, New Orleans, LA 70115, USA:
- .
- "Repetitious
transients and surges (pulse spikes) occur on power lines too, but the
more influencing transients are created by factors in home and business
wiring, water piping (poor grounding/balancing), appliances and equipment.
This repetitious long-term exposure may provide a kind of irritation
or suppression factor, posing potential hazards to our health. . . .
Persons at risk would be those exposed for years in constant proximity
to power line components (transformers, sub-stations), appliances (electric
blankets, hair dryers), power tools, TVs and computer monitors, switching
systems, and other sources of potential rapid transient (switching)
EMFs." (8)
- .
- The relevance of
studies that only consider field magnitude, while excluding other factors
such as transients, are now being questioned by some researchers. This
issue was highlighted in a recent article by Janet Raloff in Science
News, Jan. 10, 1998, "EMFs' Biological Influences - Electromagnetic
fields exert effects on and through hormones", in an interview
with Charles Graham, an experimental physiologist at the Midwest Research
Institute (MRI) in Kansas City, Mo:
- .
- "What concerns
me," Graham* says, is that the public "tends to get so worried
about the magnitude of a field. The bigger it is, the worse it's supposed
to be." In fact, Loscher has found that very high fields, as well
as those below a certain strength, have little impact on tumor growth.
Only those across a relatively narrow range consistently foster tumors
and other negative health effects.
- "We've
seen the same thing in our studies," Graham told Science News.
- .
- Moreover, he
says, it's beginning to appear that a field's magnitude matters less
that its intermittency or other features, such as power surges called
electrical transients.
- .
- These surges
can pack a big burst of energy into a short period of time. They occur
whenever lights or other electric devices turn on[or off], when motors
or compressors (such as those in refrigerators and air conditioners)
cycle on, or when dimmer switches operate. "Being transient doesn't
mean they're rare, just quick," Graham notes. Transients are hard
to avoid because they may stem from surges elsewhere - in a neighbor's
house or even power lines up the street." (9)
- .
- The argument that
powerline EMFs are too weak to possibly affect cellular processes does
not necessairly apply to transients. Research by Dr. Antonio Sastre
and collegues indicates that when it comes to powerline EMF transients,
the induced signal can rise above the background cellular noise. (10)
- .
- (See further Comments
about transients by Allen H. Frey on page 6-7)
- .
- Considering that
the Adelaide Hospital ELF mice study specifically filtered out the possible
effect of transients, the results of this study cannot be used to justify
any assurance of safety with real world exposures. It would be far more
accurate to rewrite the Press Release from the Centenary Institute to
state the following:
- .
- No Evidence
for Cancer Link with laboratory 50 Hz magnetic fields - No increase
in incidence of a cancer of the immune system called Lymphoma was detected
in mice after prolonged exposure to magnetic fields of the type emitted
by laboratory Helmholtz coils.
- .
- 5) The
NCI, Linet Study, 1997- Limitations
- .
- It is unfortunate
that the authors of the official NCI press release, which gives the
impression that this study is convincing evidence that a risk does not
exist from long term exposure to powerline electromagnetic fields, did
not take the time to critically examine what the study actually found,
and to examine the criteria which led to the NCI researchers' conclusions.
- .
- "The researchers
actually acknowledge, in no less than four places, a statistically significant
increase in acute lymphoblastic leukemia (ALL) in children exposed to
powerline magnetic fields in excess of 3 milliGauss. This is a CONFIRMATION
of many previous studies which have shown a similar level of association
between childhood leukemia and magnetic fields from electricity."
The article in The Australian mentions that the researchers dismissed
as a "statistical fluke" a 24% increase in leukemia risk for
children exposed to what is termed "especially high magnetic fields".
- .
- The NCI researchers
were able to dismiss this fact by arbitrarily setting a 2 mG level as
a cut-off limit. Only by setting that artificial limitation could
they conclude that there was no association. The fact is, that if they
had used the 3 mG level as a cut off point in their calculations, the
conclusions would have been exactly the opposite - that there is
a statistically significant connection between powerline magnetic fields
and childhood leukemia at levels over three mG.
- .
- On July 4th this
writer contacted Professor Ross Adey, one of the most well known bio-electromagnetic
researchers in the world. Dr. Adey is the author of numerous books and
research papers on the bio-effects of EMFs. He recently conducted a
$3 million research program for Motorola and was a committee chairman
on the U.S. National Council on Radiation Protection and Measurements
(NCRP). His comments on the NCI study is as follows:
- .
- "A number
of us worked on the NCI paper through last weekend. Sam Milham, the
Washington State epidemiologist and a pioneer in this field, points
out that if they had included the 3mg level in their cutoff, the conclusions
would have been exactly the opposite - that there IS a significant risk.
And selection of 2mG is quite arbitrary. David Savitz used 3mG in some
of his work. Obviously there is no steep threshold beyond which risks
rise exponentially. At the recent Bologna International Symposium, Schuz
from U. Mainz had a paper combining kids from Berlin and Southern Saxony
in high exposure homes to give leukemia odds ratio of 6.8 for young
kids (under 4yrs). So the dismissive attitude of NCI is totally unrealistic."
( 11 )
- .
- Also contacted
at the same time for comment on the NCI study was Alasdair Philips from
Powerwatch Network in the UK. Mr. Philips was a principal researcher
for the UK study "Measured Electric Fields in the Bed Places of
Leukemic Children", published in the June 1997 issue of the "
European Journal of Cancer Prevention".
- .
- "Surprisingly,
for a modern study, the NCI researchers only measured MAGNETIC fields
and did NOT include ELECTRIC fields which are being increasingly implicated
in cancer development and many other adverse health conditions. Both
magnetic and electric fields are being measured in the landmark UK Childhood
Cancer Study due out early next year, as UK researchers understand the
potential importance of electric fields. In the 1996 Ontario Hydro adult
worker study conducted by Dr. Anthony Miller of Toronto University in
Canada, when they took both fields into account, the risk rose from
1.6 (magnetic fields only, and similar to the 1.79 in this study) to
11.2 (bo the magnetic and ELECTRIC fields considered) - it is likely
to be a similar increase for children." (12 )
- .
- It should also
be noted that the magnetic field is not the equilivant of EMF. It is
only one of the now "five or six" known EMF metrics. Of these,
the electric field may well be the most important, though the role of
transients, harmonics, ground currents, radon daughters and the radiofrequencies
that "ride" on power lines are also suspect. Any study
which only considers one of these metrics cannot give any assurance
of "safety".
- .
- Comments on
the NCI Linet study by Allen H. Frey, author of On the nature
of electromagnetic field interactions with biological systems
, RG Landes Co., Austen TX, USA, 1994.
- .
- "Are the
conclusions of the Linet et al epidemiological study and associated
editorial by Campion justified? I think not.
- .
- The fault, as
is often the case in science, is in assumptions made before the study
began, assumptions upon which the study is based. If the assumptions
can not be shown to be true, then the conclusions are not valid.
- .
- In their statistical
study, it was assumed that the active agent in power line biological
effects is the 60Hz sinusoidal wave. But there is substantial data and
biological theory to indicate that the primary active agent would be
the transients that are found on power lines in varying forms to varying
degrees in various places (Frey, 1994). A broad statistical study such
as Linet et al's would tend to obscure such effects, since data from
areas where there are effective transients would be submerged in the
mass of data from areas where there are not such transients.
- .
- Epidemiological
studies, and statistical studies in general, are quite useful for hypothesis
generation. But they are not appropriate for drawing conclusions. Causality
can not be shown. There are just too many unknown and uncontrolled factors
operating in a large statistical study, as compared to wet biological
experiments. This is particularly the case with magnetic fields as an
agent, for it is not yet clear what parameters of the agent are of importance
biologically.
- .
- Is it appropriate
to draw what may be life and death conclusions on the basis of one statistical
study that is based on an assumption about what is the active agent,
an assumption that can not be shown to be true? I doubt that many people
would be willing to stake their life on one such study." (13)
- .
- Comments
on the NCI Linet study by A.R. Liboff, Professor of Physics, Oakland
University, Rochester, MI, July 14, 1997
- .
- "Like Allan
Frey, I too have doubts concerning the implications of the Linet study.
- .
- Frey points
to the possibility of transients as the metric underlying the earlier
correlations.
- .
- Another possibility
is that the geomagnetic field may be a complementary factor, either
because of cyclotron resonance or some other type of resonance interaction.
In connection with this it appears that Denver was not one of the areas
examined, which is puzzling considering the fact that data from the
Denver vicinity was the impetus for such epidemiological studies.
- .
- The media has
characterized this study as the largest yet. For some time, I have had
the feeling that funding for such studies would continue until the funders
got the answer they wanted. Never mind the original objections to the
Wertheimer and Savitz results--that epidemiological studies were "innately
non-scientific" and did not prove anything. Now that the results
are more in line with what is desired, we are subjected to newspaper
and TV reports saying that this report is the final word.
- .
- Nowhere does
the media awaken the public to the fact that, since Wertheimer's original
1979 results, there has arisen a wealth of (laboratory) evidence showing
that ELF magnetic fields can have profound effects on living things.
What in 1979 seemed inconceivable no longer appears improbable.
- .
- Perhaps now
that we have had, in the words of the media, the "final word",
the rest of us can get on with the science underlying these ELF interactions,
and, through the science, determine the consequences for human hazard."
(14)
- .
- With this in mind,
the only thing the NCI indicates is that children with magnetic field
exposures at, or under, 2 mG are not at apparent increased risk
of developing leukemia from their EMF exposure. Rather than exonerating
EMFs, the NCI study gives further support for the 1995 draft guidelines
from the U.S. National Council of Radiation Protection and Measurements.
(NCRP) These guidelines generally endorse a 2mG exposure limit.
- .
- As stated in
the NCRP Draft Guideline conclusions:
- .
- "In arriving
at the proposed guidelines, the committee has considered available laboratory
studies on bioeffects and epidemiological reports of health hazards
from electric and magnetic field exposure. . . In key areas of bioelectromagnetic
research, findings are sufficiently consistent and form a sufficiently
coherent picture to suggest plausible connections between ELF EMF exposures
and disruption of normal biological processes, in ways meriting detailed
examination of potential implications in human health." (15)
- .
- 6) The NAS/NRC
Report, 1996 - Limitations
- .
- As mentioned earlier,
this report found that there is no "conclusive and consistent
evidence showing that exposure to residential electric and magnetic
fields produces cancer, adverse neurobehavioral effects, or reproductive
and developmental defects". Using their criteria for admissable
evidence, the NRC Committee concluded that research results do not show
that EMF exposure at a residential environmental level causes adverse
health effects.
- .
- Is the NAS/NRC
report a conclusive vindication for EMFs in the health issue? The answer
to that question depends upon your viewpoint. If you take a narrow legalistic
interpretation, the 'not guilty' verdict may seen appropriate, especially
if you take into account only the evidence considered by the NRC Committee.
- .
- However if you
take a scientific interpretation and consider all the available
evidence, the conclusion is inescapable. So many scientific studies
were excluded from the "extensive" NAS/NRC report, that its
conclusions cannot be considered a proper review of current scientific
findings.
- .
- *In its
review of the literature, the NRC Committee restricted themselves to
considering only studies published in peer-reviewed journals up to mid
1995, when the report was drafted. The NRC press release states "To
date, they have found no evidence to show that EMFs can alter the
functions of cells at levels of exposure common in residential settings.
Only at levels between 1,000 and 100,000 times stronger than residential
fields have cells shown any reaction at all to EMF exposure In fact,
exposure may actually help the body in some subtle ways, for example
by speeding up the healing process after a bone is broken."
- .
- "To date"
means the cut off date of early 1995 for peer reviewed and published
research, a process which can take years, thereby omitting many studies
which had results opposed to the NAS/NRC report's own findings.
- .
- In fact the NAS/NRC
Committee only considered approximately half the evidence which was
available to them. Dr. Kjell Hansson Mild of the National Institute
for Working Life in Sweden, asked Dr Stevens, chair of the NRC Committee,
how "the report turned out to be so biased in its selection of
papers." Mild, past president of the Bioelectro-magnetics Society,
noted that the report mainly included papers that showed no effect and
omitted those that found a biological response. (16 )
- .
- *Excluded from
the NAS/NRC findings was the extensive body of occupational studies,
such as the Ontario Hydro worker study, which found that workers exposed
to high levels of magnetic and electric fields had leukemia rates that
were up to 11 times greater than expected (17). In fact the committee
acknowledged that workplace studies "have increased rather
than diminished the likelihood of an association between occupational
exposure to [EMFs] and cancer." The NAS committee only
did what has been called a "superficial overview" of this
literature because the official reason was that it was not directly
relevant to the committee's assignment. (18)
- .
- *Excluded
from the findings was the entire body of research into the effect of
environmental low level EMF exposure on melatonin, known as the melatonin
hypothesis (Low level magnetic field exposures may reduce the pineal
gland's production of cancer inhibiting melatonin and the ability of
melatonin to suppress breast cancer cells). This hypothesis is supported
by five in vitro studies, from three major laboratories, as well
some human exposure studies finding a reduction in melatonin levels
in workers exposed to EMFs. The body of this research implicates prolonged
powerline frequency magnetic field exposure in the order of 12mG with
possible hormone disruption. Besides melatonin being affected, Levels
of the stress hormone ACTH may be increased as a consequence(19)
- .
- This body of research
featured greatly at the Second World Congress for Electricity and
Magnetism in Biology and Medicine , held in Bologna, Italy in June
of 1997, where over 600 scientific papers on many topics were presented,
it was mentioned in the official program bulletin:
- .
- "A number
of experimental studies have been conducted to test the [melatonin]
hypothesis. Although the literature is still evolving and consensus
is being built, it is fair to say, a) there exists credible scientific
support for the hypothesis and, importantly, b) this support encompasses
in vitro, in vivo, and epidemiological research. The melatonin
hypothesis, thus, currently represents one of the more well documented/tested
interactions in the field of bioelectromagnetics."
- .
- The NAS press release
states, "The committee also called for more research into the
relationship between high exposures to EMFs and breast cancer
in animals already exposed to other carcinogens, and on reasons
why electromagnetic fields seem to affect the levels of the hormone
melatonin in animals, an effect not reproduced in humans."
This statement gives the impression that there is no evidence that low
level EMFs affect melatonin in humans.
- .
- The NAS can only
state this by ignoring the melatonin hypothesis research because it
did not meet the committee's strict criteria for admissable evidence.
- .
- To be fair to the
NAS/NRC report, the meta-analysis of 11 residential epidemiological
studies was one of the most thorough to date. What it did find
is that there is a reliable statistical association between childhood
leukemia and power line proximity, as classified by wire codes.
- .
- However, because
the committee was looking for conclusive evidence of a connection with
EMFs, it was able to dismiss all data which failed to meet this criteria
and therefore could not conclude EMFs were to blame. Epidemiology looks
for increases in risk factors, it does not deal with conclusive proof.
By setting such an impossible standard, the National Academy of Science
was able to dismiss the EMF link with childhood cancer and announce
to the world that there was nothing to worry about.
- .
- So rather than
being a "important benchmark document in the history of the
EMF scientific debate against which future research findings will need
to be viewed." The NAS /NRC study appears to be designed, by
its limitations, to give an assurance of safety, when the evidence does
not warrant that conclusion.
- .
- 7) NCRP draft
report guidelines (1995)
The U.S. National Council
on Radiation Protection and Measurements (NCRP), a congressionally chartered
organization, was contracted by the Environmental Protection Agency (EPA)
in 1983 to conduct a review of the biological effects of Extremely Low Frequency
(ELF) EMFs. Work was discontinued in 1986 due to funding cuts at the EPA,
but resumed in 1991. In early 1995 the draft of the 800 page NCRP report
was leaked to the New York based publication Microwave News, which
published the report's findings in August 1995. The final report was supposed
to be publicly available in early 1996, but has 2 received such intense
industry opposition to its findings that its final outcome remains uncertain.
- The Committee's
membership was described by chairman Dr. Ross Adey as "carefully
selected to cover the great majority of societal interests on this scientific
problem, including power industry engineers, epidemiologists, public
health specialists as well as molecular and cellular biologists. "The
draft report generally endorses a 2mG exposure limit. It would immediately
affect new day-care centres, schools and playgrounds, as well as have
implications for new transmission lines near existing housing.
-
- A somewhat more
flexible policy would be applied to new housing and offices. For existing
facilities, the committee recommended a more gradual approach, with
stronger restrictions phased in over time if the evidence of a health
risk continues to grow.
-
- *From the Committee's
Conclusions:
-
- "In arriving
at the proposed guidelines, the committee has considered available laboratory
studies on bioeffects and epidemiological reports of health hazards
from electric and magnetic field exposure In key areas of bioelectro-magnetic
research, findings are sufficiently consistent and form a sufficiently
coherent picture to suggest plausible connections between ELF EMF exposures
and disruption of normal biological processes, in ways meriting detailed
examination of potential implications in human health."
-
- *From studies
on humans the committee cites evidence for a link between EMF's
and: 1) childhood and adult cancer, including leukemia and brain cancer;
2) teratological effects and other reproductive anomalies; 3) neuroendocrine
and autonomic responses which, separately or collectively, may have
pathophysiological implications; 4) neurochemical, physiological, behavioural
and chronobiological responses with implications for development of
the nervous system.
-
- *From laboratory
studies the committee notes that EMFs: 1) affect cell growth regulation
in animal and tissue models in a manner consistent with tumour formation;
2) increase tumour incidence and decrease tumour latencies in animals;
3) alter gene transcriptional processes, the natural defense response
of T-lymphocytes and other cellular processes related to the development
and control of cancers; 4) affect neuroendocrine and psychosexual responses.
-
- In relation to
the effect of low level EMF's on melatonin (evidence which the NAS/NRC
report excluded), the committee concluded: "There has been a strong
focus on ELF field actions in the pineal gland, relating to the pineal
hormone melatonin, and on a broad series of regulatory functions mediated
by this hormone. Melatonin plays a key role in controlling the 24-hour
daily biological rhythm. Disturbance of the normal diurnal melatonin
rhythm is associated with altered estrogen receptor formation in the
breast, a line of experimental evidence now under study, or possible
links between ELF field exposure and human breast cancer.
-
- "Further,
melatonin has general properties as a free radical scavenger, with the
possibility of a preventative role in oxidative stress, recognized as
a basic factor in a broad spectrum of human degenerative disorders,
including coronary artery disease, Parkinson's and Alzheimer's diseases,
and aging."
-
- According to the
committee, problematic sources of ELF EMF include local electrical distribution
systems, as well as high voltage power transmission systems. Particular
appliances, including electric blankets and VDT's also rate highly as
problem sources, along with "various occupational environments".
-
- The committee states
that the evidence points to human health hazards in common exposures
to EMFs, particularly magnetic fields exceeding 0.2uT (2 milli-Gauss)
and electric fields at intensities in the range 10-100V/m (volts per
metre).
-
- "..there
is an implication that a significant proportion of the world's population
may be subjected to a low level or risk, but a risk factor with significant
societal consequences, by reason of its pervasive nature and the serious
consequences for affected individuals."
-
- NCRP interim
exposure guideline recommendations:
-
- The committee concludes
that "neither laboratory studies nor epidemiological findings can
yet establish well-defined thresholds for safety guidelines." Still,
it contends: "From available epidemiological and laboratory data,
it appears both prudent and responsible to set limits on permissible
future exposures. Therefore it calls for "interim exposure guides",
measures that "fall short of establishing either a standard or
guideline, but offer guidance to limit exposure."
-
- ALARA Policy
Endorsed:
- While the report
notes that committee members were not unanimous, it recommends a policy
in which exposures would be "As Low As Reasonably Achievable",
known as ALARA. Over a three year period, ambient exposures in existing
homes, schools and offices would be reduced to 10 mG. After six years,
there would be an option to establish a guideline of 5 mG.
-
- Each of these decisions
would be based on whatever epidemiological and laboratory studies were
then available. After ten years, a goal of 2mG would be considered.
The report stipulates that mitigation of the existing EMF environment
to this level should be adopted only after "a careful evaluation
of its socioeconomic impact, as well as its cost-effectiveness."
-
- With respect to
future construction, the report recommends observing a 2mG exposure
limit for schools and for new transmission lines near existing housing,
with somewhat less strict guidelines for new housing and offices. (20)
-
- Committee member
Dr. David Carpenter, of the School of Public Health at the State University
of New York, Albany, said, "In almost any other type of environmental
exposures, if the evidence were as strong as the association between
EMFs and cancer, there would be extensive government regulation. The
major reason that many members of the committee were unwilling to set
more rigorous standards was that it would be horrendously expensive
and unrealistic to enforce them." (21)
-
- It must be pointed
out that the NCRP report is still in a draft form and as such is has
no official standing at this time. Because of this, there are many who
would prefer that this report be ignored, while the NAS/NRC and NCI
studies be taken as the definitive evaluation on the health effects
from exposure to EMFs. It will be a sad day for science if studies,
which can only arrive at their conclusions by ignoring a significant
body of evidence, are accepted as the definitive statement on the issue.
-
- Considering further
studies, published since the 1995 NCRP draft guidelines, Epidemiologist
Nancy Wertheimer has proposed a 3 mG cut off level as a benchmark.
She wrote in the September/October 1997 issue of the Bioelectromagnetics
Society Newsletter that "...taken as a whole, the accumulated
evidence from all the studies appears to show quite consistent and significant
evidence that increased cancer risk accompanies measured or carefully
calculated fields at the very high end of the field range (over about
3 mG). The same studies show little evidence that fields in the 2 to
2.9 mG range are indicator of risk." (22)
-
- 8) Australian
maximum exposure guidelines
-
- When you take the
2 mG NCRP guideline or Nancy Wertheimer's 3 mG benchmark,
as a measure of protection from cancer, there is an apparent discrepancy
between these levels and the current maximum exposure limits, as set
by the National Health & medical Research Council (NH&MRC).
These limits are based on the guidelines set by the International Commission
on Non-Ionizing Radiation Protection (ICNIRP) in 1993:
-
- For residential
exposures: 1,000 mG / For occupational exposures: 5,000 mG
-
- The reason for
this large difference in levels is because the ICNIRP guidelines (and
Australian) specifically do not address the issue of chronic
exposure to powerline frequency EMFs.
-
- This was admitted
in 1991 by Dr. Keith Lokan, from the Australian Radiation Laboratory,
in a conference paper published in Radiation Protection in Australia:
-
- "One thing
which we have done, though it has little direct bearing on the
issue of chronic low level exposure, is to adopt the (above)
recommendations on field limits. These limits represent plausible field
values, below which immediate adverse health effects are unlikely,
and as such serve a useful purpose. They are not intended to
provide protection against possible cancer induction by continued exposure
at the lower field levels implicated in the studies . . . "(23)
-
- The attention solely
on proximity to powerlines and cancer in many of the studies may be
an over simplification. Fields generated inside homes due to house wiring,
faulty earthing and electrical appliance use, can give greater cumulative
exposures than fields emitted by nearby powerlines. School and occupational
exposures are usually not taken into consideration. The overall affect
of these additional exposures could act as a "confounder"to
reduce the significance of any study which only looks at one condition,
(cancer) and distance to powerlines.
-
- Also the preoccupation
solely on cancer and EMFs does not consider other adverse health states
which may be implicated as well. The draft NCRP report mentions these
in detail, but the majority of epidemiological studies to date mainly
focus on cancer.
-
- Evidence indicates
that electromagnetic fields may play a role in a number of disease conditions
as well as cancer, possibly acting as an immune system stresser One
recent New Zealand study which looked at homes near powerlines examined
combined chronic health problems, not just cancer. They found significant
increased risks for asthma, arthritis, type-11 diabetes other chronic
health problems.
-
- "There
were significant linear dose-response relationships between exposure
and several psychological and mental health variables. In particular,
higher time-intregrated exposures were associated with poorer coding-test
performance and more-adverse psychiatric symptomatology.
-
- The results
are consistent with the hypothesis that 50-Hz environmental magnetic
fields may affect human immune function." (24)
-
- Protective action
or more research?
-
- At what point does
the weight of evidence warrant some form of protective action for both
home and occupational exposures? This question was addressed by Les
Dalton, author of Radiation Exposures, in paper on ethics of
radiation exposures:
-
- "At some
point a growing body of evidence of an association between a disease
and a biologically active agent raises ethical as well as scientific
questions. The ethical questioning becomes more pertinent if exposure
is involuntary rather than voluntary. A genuine scientific urge to resolve
uncertainties over association between an imposed exposure and an incidence
of disease, in a study population, cannot be allowed to obscure the
fact that continued exposure takes on some aspect of human experimentation.
At some point we have to decide who should have the benefit of
the doubt, those who are exposed to, or those who emit, the agent in
question." (25)
-
- 9) Conclusions
-
- As a direct result
of the U.S. National Academy of Science/National Research Council's
report in 1995, the U.S. National Cancer Institute's Linet study in
1996, and now in Australia, the Royal Adelaide Hospital ELF mice study,
we see calls for the ending of further research into possible adverse
human health effects from exposure to powerline frequency electromagnetic
fields. This call is not justified upon careful examination of these
three studies.
-
- When one considers
the totality of current evidence now available, there are indications
that a risk may indeed exist. That risk may be small when compared to
other risks in our modern society, but important due to its pervasive
nature and possibility of serious consequences for affected individuals.
-
- For medical practitioners
who are dealing with patients on a daily basis, there is the possibility
that some of their patients may be adversely affected by prolonged exposure
to powerline magnetic fields in excess of 2 to 3 milliGauss (NCRP-Wertheimer).
The extent of that possibility is uncertain. It may be that only a small
subset of the population is affected by these fields. It may be that
the 50-60 Hertz sinusoidal wave is not the active agent, but that transients
riding on that wave may be the active agent. Most research has centered
on the magnetic component of the electromagnetic field. It may be that
in situations of exposure to the electric field, adverse effects may
also occur.
- For now, any conclusive
answers to the question on the possible adverse effects of exposure
to these fields must remain an uncertainty. However, it is the opinion
of the authors that when the totality of existing scientific evidence
is considered, a recommendation to patients (when there are indications
of possible excessive EMF exposure), to avoid or lessen this exposure,
would not be unwarranted.
-
- This could be considered
a Precautionary Principle, which in this case could be defined as:
-
- The precautionary
principle should guide medical practitioners when confronted by potential
threats to human health. The lack of full scientific certainty should
not be used as a reason for postponing measures to prevent exposure
to these potential threats. If measures generally reducing exposure
can be taken at reasonable expense and with reasonable consequences
in all other respects, an effort should be made to reduce exposures
to a level below that level which evidence indicates may be harmful
to health.
-
- Copyright: March
1998
-
- Don Maisch
- EMFacts Information
Service
- PO Box 96, North
Hobart
- Tasmania 7002
- Australia
- Fax: +61 (3) 6243
0340
- e-mail: emfacts@tassie.net.au
- http://www.tassie.net.au/emfacts/
-
- Bruce Rapley
- Bioelectromagnetic
Research And Information Network of New Zealand.
- Suite 2, 37 Ferguson
Street.
- Palmerston North
- New Zealand
- Fax: +64 6 3571075
-
- References:
-
- 1) Harris A W,
Basten A, Gebski V, Noonan D, Finnie J, Bath ML, Bangay MI , Repacholi
MH. A Test of Lymphoma Induction by Long-Term Exposure
of Eu-Pim1 Transgenic Mice to 50 Hz Magnetic Fields. Radiation
Research, 149 (3): 300-307, (1998)
-
- 2) Interview with
Professor Tony Basten, Chairman of the Adelaide Hospital's research
team, by the Sydney Morning Herald, 2 March 1998.
-
- 3) Linet MS, Hatch
EE, Kleinerman RA, Robinson LL, Kaune WT, Freidman DR, Severson RK,
Haines CM, Hartsock CT, Niwa S, Wacholder S, Tarone RE. Residential
Exposure to Magnetic Fields and Acute Lymphoblastic Leukemia in Children.
The New England Journal of Medicine, 337 (1): 1-7, (1997)
-
- 4) The Australian,
July 4, 1997.
-
- 5) National Research
Council, Possible Health Effects of Exposure to Residential Electric
and Magnetic Fields, National Academy Press, Washington, DC, 1996.
-
- 6) The Annual
Report of the Radiation Advisory Committee for the Year Ending September
1997
- Radiation Advisory
Committee, Melbourne Australia.
-
- 7) Harris A W,
Basten A, et al (as above), page 306.
-
- 8) How You Can
Avoid or Eliminate Pulsing Electric or Magnetic Fields within your home
and bedroom, by James B. Beal, EMF Interface Consulting, 5500 Prytania,
#406, New Orleans, LA 70115, USA.E-mail: EMFEFFECTS@aol.com
-
- 9) Science News,
"EMFs' Biological Influences - Electromagnetic fields exert
effects on and through hormones", By Janet Raloff. Vol.153, Jan
10,1998.
-
- 10) Sastre A,et
al., "Residential Magnetic Field Transients: How Do Their Induced
Transmembrane Voltages Compare to Thermal Noise? Paper No. A-33, DOE,
1994; and Johnston GB, Kavet R, and Sastre A," Residential Magnetic
Field Transients. Effect of Residential Services on Fields Arising from
Distribution Line Capacitor Bank Switching." Paper No. P-130A,
BEMS, 1995.
- 11) E-mail correspondence
with Dr. Ross Adey, July 7, 1997.
-
- 12) E-mail correspondence
with Alasdair Philips, editor of UK based Powerwatch News , July
1997, website: http//www.powerwatch.org.uk
-
- 13) Published Statement
on the NCI Linet study by Allen H. Frey, author of "On the nature
of electromagnetic field interactions with biological systems"(1994),
- Address: Randomline,
Countyline and Mann Roads, Huntington Valley, Penn. 19006,USA.
-
- 14) Published Statement
on the NCI Linet study by A.R. Liboff, Professor of Physics, Oakland
University, Rochester, MI, July 14, 1997.
-
- 15) Draft report
of NCRP Scientific Committee 89-3 on Extremely Low Frequency Electric
and Magnetic Fields. Section 8.5.1 Conclusion.
-
- 16) Letter by Dr.
Kjell Hansson Mild to Dr. Charles Stevens, chairman of the NAS Committee.
Microwave News,Jan/Feb 1997, p. 2.
-
- 17) Microwave
News, July/August 1996.
-
- 18) Microwave
News, Nov/Dec. 1996, p.8.
-
- 19) Maisch DR.
Melatonin, Tamoxifen, 50-60 Hertz Electromagnetic Fields and Breast
Cancer: A Discussion Paper. Tabled in the Australian Senate, 29
October 1997.
-
- 20) Draft report
of NCRP Scientific Committee 89-3 on Extremely Low Frequency Electric
and Magnetic Fields. As reported in Microwave News, July/August
1995, p.12-15.
-
- 21) Microwave
News, July/August 1995, p.11.
-
- 22) BEMS Newsletter,
Sept/Oct, 1997.
-
- 23) Radiation
Protection in Australia (1991). Vol 9, No.4
-
- 24) Beale IL, Booth
RJ, Pearce NE. Chronic Health Problems in Adults Living Near High-Voltage
Transmission Lines: Evidence for a Dose-Response Relation with Magnetic
Field Exposure.
- Bioelectromagnetics,
18: 584-594 (1997).
-
- 25) Dalton L, Social
Policy and the Regulation of Electromagnetic Field Exposures, Radiation
Protection in Australia (1993), Vol. 11, No.1.
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