| Literature DB >> 24995266 |
Loren D Knopper1, Christopher A Ollson1, Lindsay C McCallum1, Melissa L Whitfield Aslund1, Robert G Berger1, Kathleen Souweine2, Mary McDaniel2.
Abstract
The association between wind turbines and health effects is highly debated. Some argue that reported health effects are related to wind turbine operation [electromagnetic fields (EMF), shadow flicker, audible noise, low-frequency noise, infrasound]. Others suggest that when turbines are sited correctly, effects are more likely attributable to a number of subjective variables that result in an annoyed/stressed state. In this review, we provide a bibliographic-like summary and analysis of the science around this issue specifically in terms of noise (including audible, low-frequency noise, and infrasound), EMF, and shadow flicker. Now there are roughly 60 scientific peer-reviewed articles on this issue. The available scientific evidence suggests that EMF, shadow flicker, low-frequency noise, and infrasound from wind turbines are not likely to affect human health; some studies have found that audible noise from wind turbines can be annoying to some. Annoyance may be associated with some self-reported health effects (e.g., sleep disturbance) especially at sound pressure levels >40 dB(A). Because environmental noise above certain levels is a recognized factor in a number of health issues, siting restrictions have been implemented in many jurisdictions to limit noise exposure. These setbacks should help alleviate annoyance from noise. Subjective variables (attitudes and expectations) are also linked to annoyance and have the potential to facilitate other health complaints via the nocebo effect. Therefore, it is possible that a segment of the population may remain annoyed (or report other health impacts) even when noise limits are enforced. Based on the findings and scientific merit of the available studies, the weight of evidence suggests that when sited properly, wind turbines are not related to adverse health. Stemming from this review, we provide a number of recommended best practices for wind turbine development in the context of human health.Entities:
Keywords: annoyance; electromagnetic fields; human health; infrasound; low-frequency noise; noise; shadow flicker; wind turbines
Year: 2014 PMID: 24995266 PMCID: PMC4063257 DOI: 10.3389/fpubh.2014.00063
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Front Public Health ISSN: 2296-2565
General summary of reviewed articles.
| General topic | Authors | Source | Key words | General summary |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Audible noise | Shepherd et al. ( | Noise and Health | Health-related quality of life (HRQOL) | Cross-sectional study involving questionnaires about quality of life living near and away from turbines. Statistically significant differences were noted in some HRQOL scores; residents within 2 km of a turbine reporting lower overall quality of life, physical quality of life, and environmental quality of life |
| Janssen et al. ( | Journal of the Acoustical Society of America | Annoyance, economic benefit, sensitivity, visual cues | Expanded on the datasets collected by Pedersen and Persson Waye ( | |
| Verheijen et al. ( | Science of the Total Environment | Annoyance, noise limits | Objective was to assess proposed Dutch standards for wind turbine noise and consequences for people and feasibility of meeting energy policy targets. Authors used a combination of audible and low-frequency noise models and functions to predict existing level of severely annoyed people living around existing wind turbines in the Netherlands. Found that at 45 dB(Lden) severe annoyance due to low-frequency noise unlikely; suggested that this noise limit is suitable as a trade-off between the need for protection against noise annoyance and the feasibility of national targets for renewable energy | |
| Bakker et al. ( | Science of the Total Environment | Annoyance, distress, economic benefit, sleep disturbance | A dose–response relationship was found between immission levels of wind turbine sound and self-reported noise annoyance. Sound exposure was also related to sleep disturbance and psychological distress among those who reported that they could hear the sound, however not directly but with noise annoyance. Respondents living in areas with other background sounds were less affected than respondents in quiet areas. Found that people, animals, traffic and mechanical sounds were more often identified as a source of sleep disturbance than wind turbines | |
| Nissenbaum et al. ( | Noise and Health | Epworth Sleepiness Score (ESS), Pittsburgh Sleep Quality Index (PSQI), SF36v2 | Purpose of the investigations was to determine the relationship between reported adverse health effects and wind turbines among residents of two rural communities. Participants living 375–1,400 m and 3.3–6.6 km were given questionnaires to obtain data about sleep quality, daytime sleepiness and general physical and mental health. Authors reported that when compared to people living further away than 1.4 km from wind turbines, those people living within 1.4 km of wind turbines had worse sleep, were sleepier during the day and had worse mental health scores | |
| Ollson et al. ( | Noise and Health | Rebuttal to Nissenbaum et al. ( | Suggested that Nissenbaum et al. ( | |
| Barnard ( | Noise and Health | Rebuttal to Nissenbaum et al. ( | Pointed out a number of problems with Nissenbaum et al. ( | |
| Audible noise (continued) | Mroczek et al. ( | Annals of Agricultural and Environmental Medicine | SF-36, Visual Analog Scale (VAS) | Purpose of study was to assess how people’s quality of life is affected by the close proximity of wind farms. Authors found that close proximity of wind farms does not result in the worsening of the quality of life based on the Norwegian version of the SF-36 General Health Questionnaire, the Visual Analog Scale (VAS) for health assessment, and original questions |
| Taylor et al. ( | Personality and Individual Differences | Personality traits | Study examined the influence of negative oriented personality (NOP) traits on the effects of wind turbine noise and reporting on non-specific symptoms (NSS). Results of the study showed that while calculated actual wind turbine noise did not predict reported symptoms, perceived noise did | |
| Evans and Cooper ( | Acoustics Australia | Predicted and measured noise levels | A comparison of predicted noise levels from four commonly applied prediction methods against measured noise levels from six operational wind farms (at 13 locations) in accordance with the applicable guidelines in South Australia. Results indicate that the methods typically over-predicted wind farm noise levels but that the degree of conservatism appeared to depend on the topography between the wind turbines and the measurement location | |
| Maffei et al. ( | International Journal of Environmental Research and Public Health | Visual cues, perception | Investigated the effects of the visual impact of wind turbines on the perception of noise. Found distance was a strong predictor of an individual’s reaction to the wind farm; data showed that increased distance resulted in a more positive general evaluation of the scenario and decreased perceived loudness, noise annoyance, and stress caused by sound. Found the color of the wind turbines (base and blade stripes) impacted an individuals’ perception of noise | |
| Van Renterghem et al. ( | Science of the Total Environment | Annoyance, attitude, laboratory experiment, visual cues | Conducted a two-stage listening experiment to assess annoyance, recognition, and detection of noise from a single wind turbine. Results support the hypothesis that non-noise variables, such as attitude and visual cues, likely contributed to the observation that people living near wind turbines (who do not receive an economic benefit from the turbines) report higher levels of annoyance at lower sound pressure levels than would be predicted for other community noise sources | |
| Baxter et al. ( | Energy Policy | Risk perception, economic benefit, community conflict, policy | Conducted a study to investigate the role of health risk perception, economic benefit, and community conflict on wind turbine policy. Two communities were assessed: one located in proximity to two operating wind farms and a control community without turbines. Authors found that residents from the community with operational wind energy projects were more supportive of wind turbines than residents in the area without turbines | |
| Chapman et al. ( | PLoS One | Psychogenic effects, nocebo, community complaints | Provided an overview of the growing body of literature supporting the notion that the attribution of symptoms and disease to wind turbine exposure is a modern health worry. Suggested that nocebo effects likely play an important role in the observed increase in wind farm-related health complaints. Suggested that reported historical and geographical variations in complaints were consistent with “communicated diseases” with nocebo effects likely to play an important role in the etiology of complaints rather than direct effects from turbines | |
| Whitfield Aslund et al. ( | Energy Policy | Predicted annoyance, modeling | Used previously reported dose–response relationships between wind turbine noise and annoyance to predict the level of community noise annoyance that may occur in the province of Ontario. The results of this analysis indicate that the current wind turbine noise restrictions in Ontario will limit community exposure to wind turbine related noise such that levels of annoyance are unlikely to exceed previously established background levels of noise-related annoyance from other common noise sources | |
| Low-frequency noise and infrasound | Møller and Pedersen ( | Journal of the Acoustical Society of America | Annoyance, insulation, indoor sound levels | Conducted a low-frequency noise study from four large turbines (>2 MW) and 44 other small and large turbines (7 > 2 MW and 37 < 2 MW). Low-frequency sound insulation was measured for 10 rooms under normal living conditions in houses exposed to low-frequency noise. Concluded that the spectrum of wind turbine noise moves down in frequency with increasing turbine size. Suggested that the low-frequency part of the noise spectrum plays an important role in the noise at neighboring properties. They hypothesized that if the noise from the investigated large turbines had an outdoor level of 44 dB(A) there was a risk that a substantial proportion of the residents would be annoyed by low-frequency noise, even indoors |
| Bolin et al. ( | Environmental Research Letters | Health effects, review, turbulence | Conducted a literature review over a 6-month period ending April 2011 into the potential health effects related to infrasound and low-frequency noise exposure surrounding wind turbines. Concluded that empirical support was lacking for claims that low-frequency noise and infrasound cause serious health affects in the form of “vibroacoustic disease,” “wind turbine syndrome,” or harmful effects on the inner ear | |
| Rand et al. ( | Bulletin of Science, Technology and Society | Indoor sound levels, health effects, acute effects | Studies took place over a 2-day period inside a home where people were self-reporting serious adverse health effects. Authors reported on wind speed at hub of turbine, dB(A) and dB(G) filtering indoors and outdoors. Reported on acute effects | |
| Ambrose et al. ( | Bulletin of Science, Technology and Society | |||
| Turnbull et al. ( | Acoustics Australia | Underground measurement, comparative study | Developed an underground technique to measure infrasound. Measured infrasound at two Australian wind farms as well as in the vicinities of a beach, a coastal cliff, the city of Adelaide, and a power station. Reported that the measured levels at wind farms below the audibility threshold and similar to that of urban and coastal environments and near other engineered noise sources. Level of infrasound from wind farms at 360 and 85 m [61 and 72 dB(G), respectively] was comparable to that observed at a distance of 25 m from ocean waves [75 dB(G)] | |
| Crichton et al. ( | Health Psychology | Negative expectations, symptom reporting, laboratory experiment | Examined the possibility that expectations of negative health effects from exposure to infrasound promote symptom reporting using a sham controlled, double-blind provocation study. Participants in the high-expectancy group reported significant increases in the number and intensity of symptoms experienced during exposure to both infrasound and sham infrasound. Conversely, there were no symptomatic changes in the low-expectancy group | |
| Crichton et al. ( | Health Psychology | Negative and positive expectations, symptom reporting, laboratory experiment | Authors investigated how positive expectations can produce a reduction in symptoms. Expectations were found to significantly alter symptom reporting: participants who were primed with negative expectations became more symptomatic over time, suggesting that their experiences during the first exposure session reinforced expectations and led to heightened symptomatic experiences in subsequent sessions | |
| Electromagnetic fields | Havas and Colling ( | Bulletin of Science, Technology and Society | Poor power quality, ground current, electrical hypersensitivity | Authors hypothesized that symptoms of some living near wind turbines could be caused by electromagnetic waves in the form of poor power quality (dirty electricity) and ground current resulting in health effects in those that are electrically hypersensitive. Indicated that individuals reacted differently to both sound and electromagnetic waves and this could explain why not everyone experienced the same health effects living near turbines |
| Israel et al. ( | Environ-mentalist | Vibration measurement, noise, risk | Conducted EMF, sound, and vibration measurements at wind energy parks in Bulgaria. Concluded that EMF levels were not of concern from wind farm | |
| McCallum et al. ( | Environ-mental Health | Variable distances and wind, residential measures | Magnetic field measurements were collected in the proximity of 15 wind turbines, two substations, buried and overhead collector and transmission lines and nearby homes. Results suggest there is nothing unique to wind farms with respect to EMF exposure; in fact, magnetic field levels in the vicinity of wind turbines were lower than those produced by many common household electrical devices and were well below any existing regulatory guidelines with respect to human health | |
| Review articles, editorials and social commentaries | Bulletin of Science, Technology and Society (BSTS) Special Edition | Bulletin of Science, Technology and Society | Various authors, health effects, social commentary, opinion pieces | Special edition made up of nine articles devoted entirely to wind farms and potential health effects. Many of the articles in the special edition were written as opinion pieces or social commentaries |
| Hanning and Evans ( | British Medical Journal | Sleep disturbance | Purpose was to opine on the relationship between wind turbines noise and health effects. Suggested that a large body of evidence exists to suggest that wind turbines disturb sleep and impair health at distances and external noise levels that are permitted in most jurisdictions | |
| Chapman ( | British Medical Journal | Weight of evidence | In a rebuttal to Hanning and Evans ( | |
| Farboud et al. ( | Journal of Laryngology and Otology | Low-frequency noise (LFN), infrasound (IS), inner ear physiology, wind turbine syndrome | Conducted a literature search for articles published within the last 10 years, using the PubMed database and the Google Scholar search engine, to look at the effects of low-frequency noise and infrasound. Suggested the evidence available was incomplete and until the physiological effects of LFN and infrasound were fully understood, it was not possible to conclusively state that wind turbines were not causing any of the reported effects | |
| McCubbin and Sovacool ( | Energy Policy | Comparative study, natural gas, health, and environmental benefits | Compared the health and environmental benefits of wind power in contrast to natural gas | |
| Roberts and Roberts ( | Journal of Environmental Sciences | PubMed-based review, low-frequency noise (LFN), infrasound (IS), health effects | Conducted a summary of the peer-reviewed literature on the research that examined the relationship between human health effects and exposure to low-frequency sound and sound generated from the operation of wind turbines. Concluded that a specific health condition or collection of symptoms has not been documented in the peer-reviewed, published literature that has been classified as a “disease” caused by exposure to sound levels and frequencies generated by the operations of wind turbines | |
| Review articles, editorials and social commentaries (continued) | Chapman and St. George ( | Australian and New Zealand Journal of Public Health | Vibroacoustic disease (VAD); factoid | Investigated the extent to which VAD and its alleged association with wind turbine exposure had received scientific attention, the quality of that association and how the alleged association gained support by wind farms opponent. Based on a structured scientific database and Google search strategy, the authors showed that VAD has received virtually no scientific recognition and that there is no evidence of even rudimentary quality that vibroacoustic disease is associated with or caused by wind turbines. Stated that an implication of this “factoid” – defined as questionable or spurious statements – may have been contributing to nocebo effects among those living near turbines |
| Jeffery et al. ( | Canadian Family Physician | Health effects | Overall goal of these commentary pieces was to provide information to physicians regarding the possible health effects of exposure to noise produced by wind turbines and how these may manifest in patients | |
| Jeffery et al. ( | Canadian Journal of Rural Medicine |