Sunday, June 1, 2008

A new electromagnetic exposure metric: High frequency voltage transients associated with increased cancer incidence in teachers in a california school.

A new electromagnetic exposure metric: High frequency voltage transients associated with increased cancer incidence in teachers in a california school.
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/18512243?dopt=Abstract

Milham S, Morgan LL.

Washington State Department of Health, Tumwater, Washington.

BACKGROUND: In 2003 the teachers at La Quinta, California middle school complained that they had more cancers than would be expected. A consultant for the school district denied that there was a problem. OBJECTIVES: To investigate the cancer incidence in the teachers, and its cause. METHOD: We conducted a retrospective study of cancer incidence in the teachers' cohort in relationship to the school's electrical environment. RESULTS: Sixteen school teachers in a cohort of 137 teachers hired in 1988 through 2005 were diagnosed with 18 cancers. The observed to expected (O/E) risk ratio for all cancers was 2.78 (P = 0.000098), while the O/E risk ratio for malignant melanoma was 9.8 (P = 0.0008). Thyroid cancer had a risk ratio of 13.3 (P = 0.0098), and uterine cancer had a risk ratio of 9.2 (P = 0.019). Sixty Hertz magnetic fields showed no association with cancer incidence. A new exposure metric, high frequency voltage transients, did show a positive correlation to cancer incidence. A cohort cancer incidence analysis of the teacher population showed a positive trend (P = 7.1 x 10(-10)) of increasing cancer risk with increasing cumulative exposure to high frequency voltage transients on the classroom's electrical wiring measured with a Graham/Stetzer (G/S) meter. The attributable risk of cancer associated with this exposure was 64%. A single year of employment at this school increased a teacher's cancer risk by 21%. CONCLUSION: The cancer incidence in the teachers at this school is unusually high and is strongly associated with high frequency voltage transients, which may be a universal carcinogen, similar to ionizing radiation. Am. J. Ind. Med. 2008. (c) 2008 Wiley-Liss, Inc.

PMID: 18512243 [PubMed - as supplied by publisher]

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