Summary Several studies have raised the possibility that exposure to electrical and/or magnetic fields may be injurous to health in particular by the promotion or initiation of cancer. To investigate whether the electricity transmission system presents a long term hazard to public health, the mortality of nearly 8,000 persons, identified as living in the vicinity of electrical transmission facilities at the time of the 1971 Population Census, has been followed to the end of 1983. All identified transmission installations within pre-defined areas were included in the study with the result that the greater part of the study group were believed to be resident near relatively low voltage sub-stations. Overall mortality was lower than expected and no evidence of major health hazards emerged. The only statistically significant excess mortality was for lung cancer (in women overall, and in persons living closest to the installations); this result is difficult to interpret in the absence of smoking data, and is not supported by other evidence but does not appear to be due to the social class distribution of the study group. The study did not support previously reported associations of exposure to electro-magnetic fields with acute myeloid leukaemia, other lymphatic cancers and suicide.
SUMMARY In a case control study, prescription data were examined for the three months before the last menstrual period and for the first trimester ofpregnancy in (a) 115 mothers ofchildren with limb reduction defects, (b) 676 mothers of children with oral cleft, and (c) an equal number of control mothers ofnormal babies from the same doctor's practice for each case. In the limb reduction study, the study mothers were prescribed more drugs generally although this did not reach statistical significance, nor were there significant differences between study and control mothers for individual groups of drugs. In the oral cleft study, significantly more drugs were prescribed to study mothers in the three months before the last menstrual period, and a similar trend, which did not reach statistical significance, was observed in the first trimester. Anticonvulsant drugs were prescribed significantly more frequently to study mothers during the whole period of the study. A significant association was also demonstrated between oral contraceptives taken in the three months before the last menstrual period and oral cleft, but doubt must remain concerning this relationship; the risk is not well understood and is likely to be nonspecific. A number of other significant associations were identified, although their importance in practice is uncertain in view ofthe confounding factors that may affect a study of this kind.
A total of 3392 professional drivers in London were followed up in a prospective mortality study. There were significantly fewer deaths than expected from all causes (SMR 91, p
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