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Comments on “Wi-Fi technology and human health impact: a brief review of current knowledge” published in the June 2022 issue of Archives Cover

Comments on “Wi-Fi technology and human health impact: a brief review of current knowledge” published in the June 2022 issue of Archives

Open Access
|Sep 2022

Full Article

The article by Prlić et al. (1) is very interesting, and we believe that it is an important and necessary publication to keep both the scientific community and the general public informed of the rapid growth of wireless technology. Here we would like to expand on the information presented in that article and comment on some new measurements of electromagnetic wave intensity [other authors prefer to call this magnitude power density (2)] from the Wi-Fi band in schools or universities (indoor/classroom or outside environment) in different countries.

In particular, we would like to complete Table 3 in Prlić’s article (1) with measurements carried out in Spain, Jordan, and other countries presented here in Table 1. The last two columns of Table 1 show three significant figures (2), and the last column shows power density values in μW/m2. The highest measured value is 86200 μW/m2 or 0.0862 W/m2 in three primary and three secondary schools in the United Kingdom (Table 1). This is 20.6 dB below the maximum allowed reference level of 10 W/m2 (24).

Table 1

Results of personal exposure to radiofrequency electromagnetic fields from the Wi-Fi band in schools or universities (indoor/classroom or outside environment)

AuthorCountrySourceE (V/m)Power density (μW/m2)
Khalid et al. 2011 (3)United Kingdom / 3 primary, 3 secondary schoolsaccess points*/ 0.55.70b86200b
Pyman et al. 2011 (4)Laptops / 0.52.90b22300b
Joseph et al. 2010 (5)Hungary school / 31 teacher primaryWi-Fi devices*2.00–5.00a10600–66300a
Vermeeren et al. 2013 (6)Belgium (10 school area)various Wi-Fi devices*#0.0500a, 0.240b6.63a, 153b
Greece (5 school area)0.0900a, 0.200b21.5a, 106b
Verloock et al. 2014 (7)Belgium secondary / 5 primary schools andaccess Wi-points, Fi clients*# various0.340a, 2.52b307a, 16800b
Gledhill 2014 (8)New Zealand / 2 schoolsaccess points# / 2 laptops / <0.50.971a, 2.746b 0.868a, 3.36b2500a, 20000b 2000a, 30000b
Karipidis et al. 2017 (9)Australia secondary / 7 primary schools 16access points*# / 1.90.388a, 3.88b400a, 40000b
Prlić et al. (1)Croatia /151 primary & secondary schoolsacross access whole points*# classroom / (grid 1×1 m)<0.661b<1160 b
Roser et al. 2017 (10)Switzerland / at schoolusing WLAN band0.0351a3.27a
Kurnaz et al. 2018 (11, 12)Turkey / inside classroomWLAN band0.0220a1.28a
Fernandez 2020 (13)Spain / inside universityWi-Fi band0.0310a2.55a
Vermeeren et al. 2013 (6)Belgium / inside schoolsWi-Fi band0.0500a6.64a
Hardell et al. 2017 (14)Sweden / schoolsWi-Fi band0.0354a3.32a
Bhatt et al. 2016 (15)Greece / school areaWi-Fi band0.0635a10.7a
Hamiti et al. 2022 (16)Kosovo / school areaWi-Fi band0.0835a18.5a
Vermeeren et al. 2013 (6)Greece / inside schools2G Wi-Fi band0.0898 a21.4a
Ramirez-Vazquez et al. 2020 (17)Jordanian in university / total exposure area(2G Wi-and Fi 5band G bands)0.0931a23.0a
Ramirez-Vazquez et al. 2020 (18)Spain / buildings inside school(2G Wi-and Fi 5band G bands)0.0977a25.3a
Ramirez-Vazquez et al. 2020 (17)Jordanian / university area(2G Wi-and Fi 5band G bands)0.104a28.8a
Hedendahl et al. 2017 (19)Sweden / in seven schoolsWi-Fi band connection0.158a66.1a
Ibrani (20, 21et ) al. 2016 and Hamiti et al. 2018Kosovo / different officesWi-Fi band0.163a70.2a
Bhatt et al. 2016 (15)Australia / kindergarten areaWi-Fi band0.179a85.0a
Verloock et al. 2014 (7)Belgium / inside schoolsWi-Fi band0.200a106a
Gallastegi et al. 2018 (22)Spain / inside classroomincluding different Wi-sources Fi band0.213a120a
Lahham et al. 2017 (23)Palestine / inside schoolsWLAN band0.005a0.0600a
Lahham et al. 2017 (23)Palestine universities / inside area)WLAN band0.008a0.180a
Relevant ICNIRP reference levels$61 V/m10 W/m2

*2.4–2.5 GHz; #5.15–5.85 GHz. a average value; b maximum value; $ reference levels for general public exposure to time-varying electric and magnetic fields: electric field strength and equivalent plane wave power density refer to the 2–300 GHz frequency range (24)

A recently published review article (25) collected and analysed all types of studies that investigated health and biological effects of Wi-Fi exposure. The authors concluded that the measured exposure levels were several orders of magnitude below the maximum established by the International Commission on Non-Ionizing Radiation Protection (ICNIRP) of 10 W/m2 for whole-body exposure (24).

The second important aspect that we want to comment on are non-thermal effects of radiofrequency electromagnetic fields (RF-EMF). There is a paper by Pall (26), in which he comments in a well-documented manner on seven possible EMF effects in animals and humans, with special emphasis on wireless technologies. Pall claims that repeated Wi-Fi studies (26, 27, 28) show that Wi-Fi causes oxidative stress, sperm/testicular damage, neuropsychiatric effects including EEG changes, apoptosis, cellular DNA damage, endocrine changes, and calcium overload in the organism, blocking its ionic channels. However, we believe that it is necessary to continue investigations in this direction and try to clarify current doubts, since no measurement has confirmed what Pall claims in his article.

Current controversy over possible damaging effects of 2G, 3G, and 4G wireless technologies is now being extended to the new 5G technology, whose effects on the environment and people have poorly been studied (29). It remains to be seen whether these high-frequency 5G electromagnetic waves together with an already complex combination of lower frequencies will have a negative impact on public health, both from a physical and mental perspective. We witness the first generation of people who are going to have an entire lifespan (from birth to death) immersed in a sea of man-made microwave radiofrequency waves, so it will be years or decades before they know the real health consequences.

Therefore, it makes sense to ask if Wi-Fi can have any negative effects on the health of the people, animals, or plants with which we live. To give a scientific answer to this question, research on this subject is paramount, like the one being done in many European countries. We encourage researchers in this field to carry out measurements of RF-EMF from the Wi-Fi band at schools and universities, compare their data with international regulations (22), and contribute with answers to questions that arise from growing sensitivity among citizens (1, 17, 18, 25, 29).

DOI: https://doi.org/10.2478/aiht-2022-73-3671 | Journal eISSN: 1848-6312 | Journal ISSN: 0004-1254
Language: English, Croatian, Slovenian
Page range: 241 - 243
Published on: Sep 30, 2022
Published by: Institute for Medical Research and Occupational Health
In partnership with: Paradigm Publishing Services
Publication frequency: 4 issues per year

© 2022 Enrique Arribas, Isabel Escobar, Antonio Martinez-Plaza, Raquel Ramirez-Vazquez, published by Institute for Medical Research and Occupational Health
This work is licensed under the Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-NoDerivatives 4.0 License.