Artigo Revisado por pares

Indoor transformer stations as predictors of residential ELF magnetic field exposure

2007; Wiley; Volume: 29; Issue: 3 Linguagem: Inglês

10.1002/bem.20385

ISSN

1521-186X

Autores

K. Ilonen, Ari Markkanen, G. Mezei, Jukka Juutilainen,

Tópico(s)

Air Quality and Health Impacts

Resumo

Abstract Transformer stations in apartment buildings may offer a possibility to conduct epidemiological studies that involve high exposure to extremely low frequency magnetic fields (MF), avoid selection bias and minimize confounding factors. To validate exposure assessment based on transformer stations, measurements were performed in thirty buildings in three Finnish cities. In each building, spot measurements in all rooms and a 24‐h recording in a bedroom were performed in one apartment above a transformer station (AAT), in one first floor (FF) reference apartment, and one reference apartment on upper floors (UF). The apartment mean of spot measurements was 0.62 µT in the AATs, 0.21 µT in the FF and 0.11 µT in the UF reference apartments The 24‐h apartment mean (estimated from the spot measurements and the bedroom 24‐h recording) was 0.2 µT or higher in 29 (97%) AATs, in 7 (25%) FF and in 3 (10 %) UF reference apartments. The corresponding numbers for the 0.4 µT cut‐off point were 19 (63%), 4 (14%), and 1 (3.3%). The higher MF level in the FF reference apartments indicates that they should not be considered “unexposed” in epidemiological studies. If such apartments are excluded, a transformer station under the floor predicts 24‐h apartment mean MF with a sensitivity of 0.41 (or 0.58) and a specificity of 0.997 (or 0.97), depending on the MF cut‐off point (0.2 or 0.4 µT). The results indicate that apartments can be reliably classified as high and low MF field categories based on the known location of transformer stations. Bioelectromagnetics 29:213–218, 2008. © 2007 Wiley‐Liss, Inc.

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