A Report on Non-Ionizing Radiation

Andrew Bassett: Microwave News Article Archive (2004 - )

August 5, 2025

This is a story about what it’s like doing research on electromagnetic fields and public health. About what happens when you serve two masters: science and medicine, on one hand, and business and politics, on the other. It shows what has so often happened to those who follow the data. Those who link the words “EMFs” and “cancer” in the same sentence pay the price. Careers are cut short.

I’ve told many similar stories over the years, but this one is about an old friend who deserved better. It’s a story about Reba Goodman.

May 28, 2008

Robert O. Becker, a towering figure in bioelectromagnetics, died on May 14 due to complications from pneumonia. He was 84 and had been ailing for some time. Becker, best known for his research on "currents of injury" and the role they play in regeneration, made significant contributions to many areas of electrobiology. He was later drawn into public controversies over health effects — Becker is credited as the first to use the term "electromagnetic pollution"— and in the end paid dearly for speaking out.

"Bob Becker's passing marks the end of an era in bioelectromagnetics, that time when very few scientists believed that non-thermal electromagnetic exposures were biologically significant," said Abe Liboff, a physicist and the co-editor of Electromagnetic Biology and Medicine. "All the work on applying electromagnetic fields to bone repair is attributable to Becker's reinterpretation of Carlo Matteucci's discovery of currents of injury," he said.

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