Characterisation of exposure to non-ionising electromagnetic fields in the Spanish INMA birth cohort: Study protocol
M. Gallastegi, M. Guxens, A. Jimenez-Zabala, I. Calvente, M., Fernandez, L. Birks, B. Struchen, M. Vrijheid, M. Estarlich, M.F. Fernandez,, M. Torrent, F. Ballester, J.J. Aurrekoetxea, J. Ibarluzea, D. Guerra, J., Gonzalez, M. Roosli, L. Santa-Marina

TL;DR
This study protocol details comprehensive methods for assessing children's exposure to non-ionising electromagnetic fields in the INMA cohort, combining indirect, direct, and personal measurements to improve exposure assessment accuracy.
Contribution
It introduces a multi-method approach for characterising EMF-NIR exposure in children, integrating questionnaires, geospatial models, and various measurement techniques.
Findings
Validated geospatial propagation models for RF sources
Collected detailed exposure data in homes, schools, and parks
Established relationships between exposure levels and source proximity/use
Abstract
Analysis of the association between exposure to electromagnetic fields of non-ionising radiation (EMF-NIR) and health in children and adolescents is hindered by the limited availability of data, mainly due to the difficulties on the exposure assessment. This study protocol describes the methodologies used for characterising exposure of children to EMF-NIR in the INMA (INfancia y Medio Ambiente- Environment and Childhood) Project, a prospective cohort study. Indirect (proximity to emission sources, questionnaires on sources use and geospatial propagation models) and direct methods (spot and fixed longer-term measurements and personal measurements) were conducted in order to assess exposure levels of study participants aged between 7 and 18 years old. The methodology used varies depending on the frequency of the EMF-NIR and the environment (homes, schools and parks). Questionnaires…
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