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Study can't tie EMFs to cancer.


Many studies have suggested that elevated occupational exposures to electromagnetic fields electromagnetic field

Property of space caused by the motion of an electric charge. A stationary charge produces an electric field in the surrounding space. If the charge is moving, a magnetic field is also produced. A changing magnetic field also produces an electric field.
 (EMFs) from power lines, appliances, or large electric motors might spike a woman's risk of developing breast cancer (SN: 1/10/98, p. 29). A Swedish study now appears to quash that notion. It found that the 20,400 Stockholm-area women who developed breast cancer over a 23-year period had no higher EMF emf: see electromotive force.


(1) (ElectroMagnetic Field) See electromagnetic radiation.

(2) (Enhanced MetaFile) See Windows metafile.
 exposures than did 116,000 cancerfree women from that region.

"We were surprised," says study leader Ulla M. Forssen of the Karolinska Institute in Stockholm, whose team had found such an EMF-cancer link in an earlier study.

For the new study, Forssen's team first collected exposure data from 470 women in 49 occupations. Each volunteer wore a device that recorded EMF exposure every 4 seconds for 24 hours Adv. 1. for 24 hours - without stopping; "she worked around the clock"
around the clock, round the clock
. The researchers then applied those workplace-exposure data to the 136,000 women in and around Stockholm and looked for breast cancer patterns.

"We looked at these data backwards and forwards, but we just didn't find a [cancer] link" to EMFs, says Forssen, now at the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill The University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill is a public, coeducational, research university located in Chapel Hill, North Carolina, United States. Also known as The University of North Carolina, Carolina, North Carolina, or simply UNC . Her team reports its finding in the Feb. 1 American Journal of Epidemiology epidemiology, field of medicine concerned with the study of epidemics, outbreaks of disease that affect large numbers of people. Epidemiologists, using sophisticated statistical analyses, field investigations, and complex laboratory techniques, investigate the cause . Forssen notes that when the scientists applied the new workplace-exposure numbers to women in their previous study, the EMF-cancer link disappeared.--J.R.
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Article Details
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Title Annotation:Health Physics; electromagnetic fields
Publication:Science News
Article Type:Brief Article
Geographic Code:4EUSW
Date:Feb 26, 2005
Words:220
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