Environmental aces.
نویسنده
چکیده
doi: 10.1289/ehp.10217 In their otherwise informative and concise review of the current state of evidence concerning risk factors for acute childhood leukemia, Belson et al. (2007) did not correctly address nonionizing radiation and, in particular, power frequency magnetic fields as a possible risk factor for childhood leukemia. This failure may be due to a widespread misconception about the evidence concerning nonionizing electromagnetic fields (EMFs) as a health hazard. It is also apparent in the Churchill County leukemia cluster study published in the same issue, in which Rubin et al. (2007) investigated a multitude of factors, many with sparse or ambiguous previous evidence of an association with childhood leukemia. Although power frequency magnetic fields have been classified as a possible human carcinogen (group 2B) by the International Agency for Research on Cancer (IARC 2002) and by a National Institute of Environmental Health Sciences (NIEHS) working group (NIEHS 1998), based on the evidence of an association with childhood leukemia, these were apparently not considered by Rubin et al. (2007). In their review of nonionizing radiation, Belson et al. (2007) inappropriately mixed original research and pooled analyses, further contributing to the prevailing confusion. Both Ahlbom et al. (2000) and Greenland et al. (2000) presented pooled analyses that included the important study of Linet et al. (1997). Hence, it is inappropriate to present results of the latter as an independent source. Almost all epidemiologic studies of residential exposure to power frequency magnetic fields published before 1999 are included in either the pooled analyses of Ahlbom et al. (2000) or Greenland et al. (2000). Only the study of Myers et al. (1990) was not included because authors refused to provide requested data. Although the study of Linet et al. (1997) is often cited as failing to support the hypothesis of an association between residential exposure to magnetic fields and childhood leukemia [it was also cited by Belson et al. (2007)], it actually was one of the most important supporters of an association in the pooled analyses and contributed the greatest number of highly exposed children. Two large and well-conducted studies published after the pooled analyses (Kabuto et al. 2006; Schüz et al. 2001) lend further support to the results of the pooled analyses of an increased risk from high average levels of magnetic field exposure. It is also incorrect to characterize the evidence as “some have found a small association ... while others have not ....” First of all, the association is not small, but is comparable or larger than that for all other factors considered by Belson et al. (2007). Second, the evidence is consistent across different continents, study types, measurement methods, and other factors. Of course, there are potential sources of bias, in particular selection bias. However, thorough investigations of these potential biases have rendered it unlikely that they can completely explain the association. Up to now, there is no other risk factor of childhood leukemia that has been as comprehensively studied concerning possible biases and confounding factors. It is high time that exposure to power frequency EMFs is recognized as a potential risk factor for childhood leukemia and is properly included in the protocols of cluster studies and in epidemiologic studies of other risk factors as a potential confounder. The author declares he has no competing financial interests.
منابع مشابه
Parental alcoholism, adverse childhood experiences, and later risk of personal alcohol abuse among Chinese medical students.
OBJECTIVE To determine the status of adverse childhood experiences (ACEs) and the association of multiple ACEs with both parental alcoholism and later personal alcohol abuse among Chinese medical students with a view of improving adolescent health and reducing alcohol abuse among them. METHODS In this cross-sectional study, 2073 Chinese medical students completed a survey on ten categories of...
متن کاملThe Impact of Adverse Experiences in Childhood Relationships on the Mental Health of University Students
Background and Objective: The aim of this study was to evaluate the rate of adverse experiences in childhood experiences (relational ACEs) in family and school settings, among university students, and investigate how they affect the students’ negative health outcomes including depression, anxiety, suicidal attitude, lifetime serious suicidal thought (LSST). Methods: In this study, 524 students ...
متن کاملAn Adaptive Cryptographic and Embedded System Design with Hardware Virtualization
This work proposes an adaptive cryptographic and embedded system (ACES) design that can adapt its hardware and software functionalities at runtime to different system requirements. By using the hardware virtualization technique in the ACES design, a fixed set of logic resources can be configured as different hardware modules at runtime to support multiple software applications. Further, by taki...
متن کاملIndividual and Neighborhood Stressors, Air Pollution and Cardiovascular Disease
Psychosocial and environmental stress exposures across the life course have been shown to be relevant in the development of cardiovascular disease (CVD). Assessing more than one stressor from different domains (e.g., individual and neighborhood) and across the life course moves us towards a more integrated picture of how stress affects health and well-being. Furthermore, these individual and ne...
متن کاملBiased Dismissal of Epigenetic Evidence for “Clean-Diesel” Carcinogenicity and Genotoxicity
In 2012, the International Agency for Research on Cancer (IARC) named Traditional Diesel Exhaust (TDE) a “known human carcinogen”. Most western nations agreed, passing new regulations. Yet the US denies TDE is a known carcinogen, says scientific data are uncertain, and does not regulate TDE emissions of 80 percent of US-diesel vehicles. It did require post-2007, US-heavyduty-diesel vehicles to ...
متن کاملState - Variable and Representativeness Errors Conceal “ Clean Diesel ” Harm : Methodologically Fallacious ACES Research
In 2015 authors of four joint US-government and auto-and-oil-industry studies, ACES, claimed to have done the first comprehensive evaluation of lifetime exposure to new-technology-diesel exhaust (NTDE-2007), so-called “clean diesel” required by US emissions standards for year-2007 and later heavy-duty trucks. ACES claimed to have found no evidence that NTDE-2007 causes lung cancer. However, sin...
متن کاملذخیره در منابع من
با ذخیره ی این منبع در منابع من، دسترسی به آن را برای استفاده های بعدی آسان تر کنید
عنوان ژورنال:
- Environmental Health Perspectives
دوره 105 شماره
صفحات -
تاریخ انتشار 1997