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Is epidemiology implicating extremely low frequency electric and magnetic fields in childhood leukemia?

PAPER pubmed Environmental health and preventive medicine 2002 Review Effect: mixed Evidence: Low

Abstract

We have reviewed epidemiological studies examining the association between residential exposure to extremely low frequency electric and magnetic fields (ELF-EMF) and childhood leukemia. We have excluded studies focusing on electrical appliances, because it is difficult to consolidate transient exposure from multiple sources and equally difficult to control information bias. We have identified 24 studies of residential exposure to ELF-EMF and childhood leukemia. About half of these studies were reported as positive and the remaining as null. For each of the studies reported as positive, however, one or more sources of bias could not be confidently excluded. Moreover, studies which were methodologically more sound, or benefited from high quality registry data, were more frequently null than other investigations. We conclude that the empirical evidence in support of an association between ELF-EMF and childhood leukemia is weak.

AI evidence extraction

At a glance
Study type
Review
Effect direction
mixed
Population
children
Sample size
Exposure
ELF residential
Evidence strength
Low
Confidence: 78% · Peer-reviewed: yes

Main findings

Review of 24 epidemiological studies of residential ELF electric and magnetic field exposure and childhood leukemia found about half reported positive associations and half null. The authors note that positive studies had potential biases that could not be confidently excluded, and methodologically stronger studies were more often null; they conclude evidence supporting an association is weak.

Outcomes measured

  • childhood leukemia

Limitations

  • Excluded studies focusing on electrical appliances due to difficulty consolidating transient exposure from multiple sources and controlling information bias
  • For positive studies, one or more sources of bias could not be confidently excluded
View raw extracted JSON
{
    "study_type": "review",
    "exposure": {
        "band": "ELF",
        "source": "residential",
        "frequency_mhz": null,
        "sar_wkg": null,
        "duration": null
    },
    "population": "children",
    "sample_size": null,
    "outcomes": [
        "childhood leukemia"
    ],
    "main_findings": "Review of 24 epidemiological studies of residential ELF electric and magnetic field exposure and childhood leukemia found about half reported positive associations and half null. The authors note that positive studies had potential biases that could not be confidently excluded, and methodologically stronger studies were more often null; they conclude evidence supporting an association is weak.",
    "effect_direction": "mixed",
    "limitations": [
        "Excluded studies focusing on electrical appliances due to difficulty consolidating transient exposure from multiple sources and controlling information bias",
        "For positive studies, one or more sources of bias could not be confidently excluded"
    ],
    "evidence_strength": "low",
    "confidence": 0.7800000000000000266453525910037569701671600341796875,
    "peer_reviewed_likely": "yes",
    "keywords": [
        "epidemiology",
        "review",
        "extremely low frequency",
        "ELF-EMF",
        "electric fields",
        "magnetic fields",
        "residential exposure",
        "childhood leukemia",
        "bias"
    ],
    "suggested_hubs": []
}

AI can be wrong. Always verify against the paper.

AI-extracted fields are generated from the abstract/metadata and may be incomplete or incorrect. This content is for informational purposes only and is not medical advice.

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