Occupational exposure to electromagnetic fields in physiotherapy departments

To assess occupational exposure to electromagnetic fields, 11 microwave (MW), 4 short-wave diathermy and 15 magneto therapy devices were analysed in eight physiotherapy departments. Measurements taken at consoles and environmental mapping showed values above European Directive 2004/40/EC and ACGIH e...

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Veröffentlicht in:Radiation protection dosimetry 2008-01, Vol.128 (2), p.180-190
Hauptverfasser: Maccà, I., Scapellato, M. L., Carrieri, M., Pasqua di Bisceglie, A., Saia, B., Bartolucci, G. B.
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container_end_page 190
container_issue 2
container_start_page 180
container_title Radiation protection dosimetry
container_volume 128
creator Maccà, I.
Scapellato, M. L.
Carrieri, M.
Pasqua di Bisceglie, A.
Saia, B.
Bartolucci, G. B.
description To assess occupational exposure to electromagnetic fields, 11 microwave (MW), 4 short-wave diathermy and 15 magneto therapy devices were analysed in eight physiotherapy departments. Measurements taken at consoles and environmental mapping showed values above European Directive 2004/40/EC and ACGIH exposure limits at ∼50 cm from MW applicators (2.45 GHz) and above the Directive magnetic field limit near the diathermy unit (27.12 MHz). Levels in front of MW therapy applicators decreased rapidly with distance and reduction in power; this may not always occur in work environments where nearby metal structures (chairs, couches, etc.) may reflect or perturb electromagnetic fields. Large differences in stray field intensities were found for various MW applicators. Measurements of power density strength around MW electrodes confirmed radiation fields between 30° and 150°, with a peak at 90°, in front of the cylindrical applicator and maximum values between 30° and 150° over the whole range of 180° for the rectangular parabolic applicator. Our results reveal that although most areas show substantially low levels of occupational exposure to electromagnetic fields in physiotherapy units, certain cases of over-occupational exposure limits do exist.
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source MEDLINE; Oxford University Press Journals All Titles (1996-Current); Alma/SFX Local Collection
subjects Diathermy - instrumentation
Electromagnetic Fields - adverse effects
Humans
Italy
Occupational Exposure - adverse effects
Personnel, Hospital
Physical Therapy Department, Hospital - manpower
Radiation Monitoring
title Occupational exposure to electromagnetic fields in physiotherapy departments
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