Assessment of occupational exposure to radiofrequency fields and radiation.

T G Cooper, S G Allen, R P Blackwell, I Litchfield, S M Mann, J M Pope, M J A van Tongeren

National Radiological Protection Board, Chilton, Didcot, Oxon OX11 0RQ, UK.

Journal Article: Radiation Protection Dosimetry (impact factor: 0.71). 02/2004; 111(2):191-203. DOI: 10.1093/rpd/nch334

Abstract

The use of personal monitors for the assessment of exposure to radiofrequency fields and radiation in potential future epidemiological studies of occupationally exposed populations has been investigated. Data loggers have been developed for use with a commercially available personal monitor and these allowed personal exposure records consisting of time-tagged measurements of electric and magnetic field strength to be accrued over extended periods of the working day. The instrumentation was worn by workers carrying out tasks representative of some of their typical daily activities at a variety of radio sites. The results indicated significant differences in the exposures of workers in various RF environments. A number of measures of exposure have been examined with a view to assessing possible exposure metrics for epidemiological studies. There was generally a good correlation between a given measure of electric field strength and the same measure of magnetic field strength.

Source: PubMed

Comments on this publication

ResearchGate members can add comments. Sign up now and post your comment!

Science & Research Jobs

Keywords

allowed personal exposure records
 
commercially available personal
 
Data loggers
 
electric field strength
 
epidemiological studies
 
given measure
 
good correlation
 
magnetic field strength
 
measures
 
personal monitors
 
potential future epidemiological studies
 
radio sites
 
radiofrequency fields
 
tasks representative
 
time-tagged measurements
 
various RF environments
 
workers
 
working day