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The History of Bioelectromagnetism
hazards associated with electric feld from transmission lines and from the workplace led to many stud
ies and continued controversy about whether adverse health efects on humans occur. In particular, the
construction of Extra High Voltage (EHV)-AC transmission lines gave public and scientifc interest.
Te scientifc research focused on the possible efects of electric felds, audible, and radio noises and
ozone. Te papers on the biological and health efects of high electric feld were published (Hauf, 1974,
1976; Malboysson, 1976; Silney, 1976). Apart from the work of the Soviet Union investigators, there were
almost no reports of harmful efects related to electric felds. Tese reports include medical studies of
10 energized line workers exposed to energized 350 kV transmission lines (Singewald, 1973), medical
studies of 56 substation maintenance workers at 735 kV substations (Roberge, 1976), medical studies of
53 workers with over 5 years at 400 kV substations (Knave et al., 1979), and medical studies of residents
near 200/400 kV transmission lines (Strumza, 1970), etc.
A study conducted to confrm the reports from the Soviet Union was made by professor Kouwenhoven
and his group of John Hopkins University (Kouwenhoven et al., 1966, 1967). Te group looked at the
health efects on linemen working on live lines at 138 and 345 kV electric felds and added evidence to
refute the hazard report from the Soviet Union. A total of 11 male workers, ranging from 30 to 47 years
of age, were subjected to a total of 42 months of continuous health examinations from December 1962
to May 1966. During this period, fve physical examinations were conducted at the John Hopkins
University Hospital. Te results of these periodic physical examinations showed no efect of the electric
felds. Te health of the workers engaged in these live line operations continued to be followed for a total
of 9 years until 1972. Although one of the 11 workers who participated in the follow-up study did not
participate in the study afer 1967, Kouwenhoven and his colleagues reported that the electric feld did
not cause any health problems based on nearly 9 years of research. Kouwenhoven who led this study was
born in Brooklyn, New York, and began investigating the efects of electric shocks on the human body
and electrical stimulation of the heart in the 1920s, and is known as a pioneer in the study of the efects
of electricity on human.
In another subject, In 1973 Louse B. Young (1919–2010), a physicist and science writer, who lived in a
small village in Ohio, published the book Power over People (Young, 1973, 1992). Back cover of this book
showed a photograph of a woman, presumably Mrs. Young, holding two fuorescent bulbs, while stand
ing directly under a high voltage transmission line and the fuorescent bulbs glow brightly in a dim light.
Te book described how plans were being made to build a high voltage transmission line across the land
where a family had lived for several generations, and how they joined the movement to oppose it from
1969 to 1972, when it was being built. Opposition to the line was strong in 1970s in Minnesota, New York,
and other states. Until the frst half of the 1970s, concerns for the biological efects of electromagnetic
felds generated by high voltage power transmission lines had focused on induced voltages on objects
and human. For example, concerns were on perceptible shocks experimentally by humans near metal
lic structures, near and under high voltage power transmission lines, and installation. Humans sensed
clearly vibrations in the hair.
In the late 1970s and early 1980s, human health issues came from the epidemiological studies that
established a link between an increase of cancer in child and adult due to exposure to extremely low-
frequency electromagnetic felds (ELF-EMF). Te issue of the infuence of electromagnetic felds on
human health was taken up widely. Te research expanded in the 1980s to include the study of a pos
sible association between ELF-magnetic felds and cancer in residents near power transmission lines.
In 1979, Nancy Wertheimer (1927–2007), an epidemiologist at Medical Center, University of Colorado,
and Edward A. Leeper, an engineer, compared the distribution of childhood cancer in the Denver area
of Colorado with wire code, the index of degree of current fow of power lines. Actual exposure was not
measured. Tey published its results as an epidemiological study in a journal that showed an increased
risk of leukemia in children living near power transmission lines (Wertheimer and Leeper, 1979). Tey
inferred that a possible association exists between childhood cancer and exposure to ELF-magnetic
felds. Te incidence was roughly doubled in the exposed cases compared to the control cases. Since
the publication of the Wertheimer-Leeper study, many new research eforts related to the safety of