Gabriele Berg-Beckhoff
University of Southern Denmark
Network
Latest external collaboration on country level. Dive into details by clicking on the dots.
Publication
Featured researches published by Gabriele Berg-Beckhoff.
Cancer Epidemiology | 2011
Elisabeth Cardis; Isabelle Deltour; Martine Vrijheid; A. S Evrard; M Moissonnier; Bruce K. Armstrong; Julianne Brown; Graham G. Giles; Jack Siemiatycki; Louise Nadon; Marie-Elise Parent; Daniel Krewski; M. M McBride; Christoffer Johansen; Helle Collatz Christensen; Anssi Auvinen; Päivi Kurttio; Anna Lahkola; Tina Salminen; Martine Hours; Marlène Bernard; L. Montestruq; Joachim Schüz; Maria Blettner; Gabriele Berg-Beckhoff; Brigitte Schlehofer; Siegal Sadetzki; Angela Chetrit; Avital Jarus-Hakak; Susanna Lagorio
BACKGROUND The rapid increase in mobile telephone use has generated concern about possible health risks of radiofrequency electromagnetic fields from these devices. METHODS A case-control study of 1105 patients with newly diagnosed acoustic neuroma (vestibular schwannoma) and 2145 controls was conducted in 13 countries using a common protocol. Past mobile phone use was assessed by personal interview. In the primary analysis, exposure time was censored at one year before the reference date (date of diagnosis for cases and date of diagnosis of the matched case for controls); analyses censoring exposure at five years before the reference date were also done to allow for a possible longer latent period. RESULTS The odds ratio (OR) of acoustic neuroma with ever having been a regular mobile phone user was 0.85 (95% confidence interval 0.69-1.04). The OR for ≥10 years after first regular mobile phone use was 0.76 (0.52-1.11). There was no trend of increasing ORs with increasing cumulative call time or cumulative number of calls, with the lowest OR (0.48 (0.30-0.78)) observed in the 9th decile of cumulative call time. In the 10th decile (≥1640 h) of cumulative call time, the OR was 1.32 (0.88-1.97); there were, however, implausible values of reported use in those with ≥1640 h of accumulated mobile phone use. With censoring at 5 years before the reference date the OR for ≥10 years after first regular mobile phone use was 0.83 (0.58-1.19) and for ≥1640 h of cumulative call time it was 2.79 (1.51-5.16), but again with no trend in the lower nine deciles and with the lowest OR in the 9th decile. In general, ORs were not greater in subjects who reported usual phone use on the same side of the head as their tumour than in those who reported it on the opposite side, but it was greater in those in the 10th decile of cumulative hours of use. CONCLUSIONS There was no increase in risk of acoustic neuroma with ever regular use of a mobile phone or for users who began regular use 10 years or more before the reference date. Elevated odds ratios observed at the highest level of cumulative call time could be due to chance, reporting bias or a causal effect. As acoustic neuroma is usually a slowly growing tumour, the interval between introduction of mobile phones and occurrence of the tumour might have been too short to observe an effect, if there is one.
Occupational and Environmental Medicine | 2008
Maria Blettner; Brigitte Schlehofer; Jürgen Breckenkamp; Bernd Kowall; Sven Schmiedel; Ursula Reis; Peter Potthoff; Joachim Schüz; Gabriele Berg-Beckhoff
Objective: The aim of this first phase of a cross-sectional study from Germany was to investigate whether proximity of residence to mobile phone base stations as well as risk perception is associated with health complaints. Methods: The researchers conducted a population-based, multi-phase, cross-sectional study within the context of a large panel survey regularly carried out by a private research institute in Germany. In the initial phase, reported on in this paper, 30 047 persons from a total of 51 444 who took part in the nationwide survey also answered questions on how mobile phone base stations affected their health. A list of 38 health complaints was used. A multiple linear regression model was used to identify predictors of health complaints including proximity of residence to mobile phone base stations and risk perception. Results: Of the 30 047 participants (response rate 58.6%), 18.7% of participants were concerned about adverse health effects of mobile phone base stations, while an additional 10.3% attributed their personal adverse health effects to the exposure from them. Participants who were concerned about or attributed adverse health effects to mobile phone base stations and those living in the vicinity of a mobile phone base station (500 m) reported slightly more health complaints than others. Conclusions: A substantial proportion of the German population is concerned about adverse health effects caused by exposure from mobile phone base stations. The observed slightly higher prevalence of health complaints near base stations can not however be fully explained by attributions or concerns.
Occupational and Environmental Medicine | 2008
Gabriele Berg-Beckhoff; Maria Blettner; Bernd Kowall; Jürgen Breckenkamp; Brigitte Schlehofer; Sven Schmiedel; Christian Bornkessel; Ursula Reis; Peter Potthoff; Joachim Schüz
Objective: The aim of the cross-sectional study was to test the hypothesis that exposure to continuous low-level radio frequency electromagnetic fields (RF-EMFs) emitted from mobile phone base stations was related to various health disturbances. Methods: For the investigation people living mainly in urban regions were selected from a nationwide study in 2006. In total, 3526 persons responded to a questionnaire (response rate 85%). For the exposure assessment a dosimeter measuring different RF-EMF frequencies was used. Participants answered a postal questionnaire on how mobile phone base stations affected their health and they gave information on sleep disturbances, headaches, health complaints and mental and physical health using standardised health questionnaires. Information on stress was also collected. Multiple linear regression models were used with health outcomes as dependent variables (n = 1326). Results: For the five health scores used, no differences in their medians were observed for exposed versus non-exposed participants. People who attributed adverse health effects to mobile phone base stations reported significantly more sleep disturbances and health complaints, but they did not report more headaches or less mental and physical health. Individuals concerned about mobile phone base stations did not have different well-being scores compared with those who were not concerned. Conclusions: In this large population-based study, measured RF-EMFs emitted from mobile phone base stations were not associated with adverse health effects.
Occupational and Environmental Medicine | 2009
Martine Vrijheid; Simon Mann; Paolo Vecchia; Joe Wiart; Masao Taki; L. Ardoino; Bruce K. Armstrong; Anssi Auvinen; D. Bedard; Gabriele Berg-Beckhoff; Julianne Brown; Angela Chetrit; H. Collatz-Christensen; E. Combalot; Angus Cook; Isabelle Deltour; Maria Feychting; Graham G. Giles; Sarah J. Hepworth; Martine Hours; Ivano Iavarone; Christoffer Johansen; Daniel Krewski; Päivi Kurttio; Susanna Lagorio; Stefan Lönn; Mary L. McBride; L. Montestrucq; Roger Parslow; Siegal Sadetzki
Objectives: The output power of a mobile phone is directly related to its radiofrequency (RF) electromagnetic field strength, and may theoretically vary substantially in different networks and phone use circumstances due to power control technologies. To improve indices of RF exposure for epidemiological studies, we assessed determinants of mobile phone output power in a multinational study. Methods: More than 500 volunteers in 12 countries used Global System for Mobile communications software-modified phones (GSM SMPs) for approximately 1 month each. The SMPs recorded date, time, and duration of each call, and the frequency band and output power at fixed sampling intervals throughout each call. Questionnaires provided information on the typical circumstances of an individual’s phone use. Linear regression models were used to analyse the influence of possible explanatory variables on the average output power and the percentage call time at maximum power for each call. Results: Measurements of over 60 000 phone calls showed that the average output power was approximately 50% of the maximum, and that output power varied by a factor of up to 2 to 3 between study centres and network operators. Maximum power was used during a considerable proportion of call time (39% on average). Output power decreased with increasing call duration, but showed little variation in relation to reported frequency of use while in a moving vehicle or inside buildings. Higher output powers for rural compared with urban use of the SMP were observed principally in Sweden where the study covered very sparsely populated areas. Conclusions: Average power levels are substantially higher than the minimum levels theoretically achievable in GSM networks. Exposure indices could be improved by accounting for average power levels of different telecommunications systems. There appears to be little value in gathering information on circumstances of phone use other than use in very sparsely populated regions.
European Journal of Epidemiology | 2009
Gabriele Berg-Beckhoff; Joachim Schüz; Maria Blettner; Eva Münster; Klaus Schlaefer; Jiirgen Wahrendorf; Brigitte Schlehofer
The aim of the present analysis was to examine the association of a medical history of asthma, hay fever, eczema, or epilepsy with the risk of glioma and meningioma. Data of a German population-based case–control study included 381 meningioma cases, 366 glioma cases, and 1,494 controls. Participants’ histories of asthma, hay fever, eczema, and epilepsy and the respective ages at onset were asked during a personal interview. A small inverse association between allergic condition and both glioma (odds ratio: 0.92; 95% CI: 0.70–1.22) and meningioma (odd ratio: 0.87; 95% CI: 0.66–1.14) was found. For glioma, this inverse association was more pronounced in persons reporting to have asthma compared to other allergic conditions. The positive association between epilepsy and particularly glioma suggests that epilepsy is an early symptom of the disease. As the association was seen also for epilepsies occurring more than a decade before the diagnosis of glioma, this might indicate either an aetiological role of epilepsy, or a relatively long preclinical phase. In conclusion our study confirms previous findings of case control studies but not those from cohort studies. However, possible selection bias in case control studies might not explain the different results in its entirety.
Pediatrics | 2014
Julie Werenberg Dreier; Anne-Marie Nybo Andersen; Gabriele Berg-Beckhoff
BACKGROUND AND OBJECTIVE: Fever during pregnancy has been suspected to harm the developing fetus. However, until now, no systematic analysis of the available evidence has been undertaken to assess the impact of maternal fever on health outcomes in the child. The goal of this study was to systematically review evidence from epidemiologic studies on adverse health outcomes of the offspring in relation to exposure to maternal fever during pregnancy. METHODS: Systematic searches in PubMed, Web of Science, and the Cochrane Library were performed by using Medical Subject Headings, Boolean operators, and truncation, and references of references were reviewed. Cohort and case-control studies addressing health outcomes of prenatal fever exposure in humans were eligible for inclusion. Studies with no direct reference to fever, studies in selected populations (eg, preterm births), and studies published before 1990 were excluded. RESULTS: The available literature supported an increased risk of adverse offspring health in association with fever during pregnancy. The strongest evidence was available for neural tube defects, congenital heart defects, and oral clefts, in which meta-analyses suggested between a 1.5- and nearly 3-fold increased risk with fever exposure in the first trimester. We did not find strong evidence of a dose–response relationship, but there was some evidence that antipyretic medications may have a protective effect when used in relation to febrile episodes. CONCLUSIONS: We found substantial evidence to support the contention that maternal fever during pregnancy may negatively affect offspring health. The harmful effects seemed to cover both short- and longer-term health outcomes; however, for several outcomes, the evidence was insufficient to judge any association.
Public Health Nutrition | 2010
Beate Bokhof; Anke L. B. Günther; Gabriele Berg-Beckhoff; Anja Kroke; Anette E. Buyken
OBJECTIVE To date, only a few nutritional assessment methods have been validated against the biomarker of urinary-N excretion for use in children and adolescents. The aim of the present study was to validate protein intake from one day of a weighed dietary record against protein intake estimated from a simultaneously collected 24 h urine sample. DESIGN Cross-sectional analyses including 439 participants of the Dortmund Nutritional and Longitudinally Designed (DONALD) Study from four age groups (3-4, 7-8, 11-13 and 18-23 years). Mean differences, Pearson correlation coefficients (r), cross-classifications and Bland-Altman plots were used to assess agreement between methods. RESULTS Weighed dietary records significantly underestimated mean protein intake by -6.4 (95 % CI -8.2, -4.7) g/d or -11 %, with the difference increasing across the age groups from -0.6 (95 % CI -2.7, 1.5) g/d at age 3-4 years to -13.5 (95 % CI -18.7, -8.3) g/d at age 18-23 years. Correlation coefficients were r = 0.7 for the total study sample and ranged from r = 0.5 to 0.6 in the different age groups. Both methods classified 85 % into the same/adjacent quartile for the whole study group (83-86 % for the different age groups) and 2.5 % into the opposite quartile (1.9-3.1 % for the different age groups). Bland-Altman plots for the total sample indicated that differences in protein intake increased across the range of protein intake, while this bias was not obvious within the age groups. CONCLUSIONS Protein intake in children and adolescents can be estimated with acceptable validity by weighed dietary records. In this age-heterogeneous sample, validity was lower among adolescents and young adults.
Schriften des Forschungszentrum Jülich. Reihe Gesundheid/Health | 2009
Peter M. Wiedemann; Holger Schütz; Franziska U. Börner; Gabriele Berg-Beckhoff; Rodney J. Croft; Alexander Lerchl; Luc Martens; Georg Neubauer; Sabine Regel; Michael Repacholi
ZusammenfassungEin Review der epidemiologischen Studien zu den Auswirkungen von HF EMF-Expositionen auf Tumorbildung und Leukämieerkrankungen bei Kindern sowie experimentellen Untersuchungen zu Effekten von HF EMF-Expositionen auf Kognition und ZNS bei Kindern, das die wissenschaftliche Literatur bis August 2010 umfasst, findet keine oder nur unzureichende wissenschaftliche Evidenz für die Annahme, dass HF EMF ein Risikofaktor für Kinder ist. Dieser Befund steht im Gegensatz zu der Risikowahrnehmung in (zumindest Teilen) der Öffentlichkeit, die einen Zusammenhang zwischen HF-Exposition und Gesundheitsrisiken befürchtet. Konsequenzen für die Risikokommunikation werden diskutiert. Besonders erschwerend für eine wissenschaftliche korrekte und zugleich leicht zu verständliche Risikokommunikation ist es, dass nicht ausgeschlossen werden kann, dass HF EMF ein Risikofaktor ist, zum einen wegen der bestehenden Wissenslücken, zum anderen aber insbesondere wegen der Unmöglichkeit, einen Nicht-Effekt zu beweisen.SummaryA review of the scientific literature published until August 2010, covering epidemiological studies on the effects of RF EMF exposure on the incidence of brain tumours and leukaemia in children as well as experimental studies on RF EMF effects on cognition and CNS in children, reveals no or only scant evidence for the assumption that RF EMF exposure poses a hazard to children. This result is at odds with public risk perceptions, i.e. prevailing concerns of (at least part of) the public about adverse health effect of RF EMF. Consequences for risk communication are discussed. A scientifically sound and easy-to-understand risk communication is especially exacerbated by the fact that current risk assessments cannot exclude that RF EMF might have adverse health effects due remaining knowledge gaps, but especially due to the impossibility to prove a non-effect.
Journal of Child Psychology and Psychiatry | 2016
Julie Werenberg Dreier; Anne-Marie Nybo Andersen; Allan Hvolby; Ester Garne; Gabriele Berg-Beckhoff
BACKGROUND Fever and infections are common events during pregnancy, and have been shown to be associated with neurodevelopmental impairment in the offspring. The evidence in relation to attention deficit/hyperactivity disorder (ADHD) is, however, nonexistent for fever and limited for infections. The aim of this study was therefore to investigate the impact of these exposures on the occurrence of ADHD in the offspring, considering gestational timing as well as intensity of exposure. METHODS The study was conducted within the Danish National Birth Cohort, using data on 89,146 pregnancies enrolled during 1996-2002. Exposure to fever and infections were assessed prospectively in two computer-assisted telephone interviews during pregnancy and ADHD status in the child was determined using registry information from three nation-wide patient and prescription registers. Stratified Cox regressions were used to calculate adjusted hazard ratios of ADHD occurrence. RESULTS The analyses revealed no overall association between maternal exposure to fever or infections and ADHD in the offspring [adjusted hazard ratio (aHR): 1.03, 95% confidence interval (CI): 0.93-1.13 and aHR: 1.01, 95% CI: 0.92-1.11]. When the exposures were considered during specific gestational periods, increased rates of ADHD were observed following fever in gestational weeks 9-12 (aHR: 1.33, 95% CI: 1.12-1.58), and genitourinary infections in weeks 33-36 (aHR: 1.60, 95% CI: 1.13-2.26). CONCLUSIONS Although no overall adverse association between fever and infections in pregnancy and ADHD in the offspring was found, the analyses indicated that exposures during specific time windows of the pregnancy could be associated with increased ADHD occurrence.
Public Health Nutrition | 2010
Katharina Nimptsch; Gabriele Berg-Beckhoff; Jakob Linseisen
OBJECTIVE To evaluate the association between fatty acid (alpha-linolenic acid (ALA), EPA, DHA, palmitic, stearic, oleic, linoleic and arachidonic acids) intake and prospective weight change in the Heidelberg cohort of the European Prospective Investigation into Cancer and Nutrition. DESIGN Prospective cohort study with mean follow-up time of 6.5 years. In a total of 9182 men and 10867 women aged 35 to 64 years, from body weight measurement at recruitment and calibrated body weight during follow-up, weight change was expressed as mean annual weight change relative to baseline weight (%/year) and categorised into four groups (weight loss, <-2.5%/5 years; stable weight, between -2.5 and +2.5%/5 years; small weight gain, > or =2.5 to <7.5%/5 years; large weight gain, > or =7.5%/5 years). Energy-adjusted dietary fatty acid intake data were estimated from the FFQ completed at baseline. Multivariate linear regression models as well as multinomial logistic regression analyses (carbohydrate replacement models) were conducted. RESULTS Stearic acid intake was linearly associated with weight gain (P < 0.01) in men and women. Linear associations also existed for ALA and arachidonic acid intake, significantly so in women. In multinomial models, women in the highest tertile of ALA and stearic acid intake showed increased OR (95 % CI) for small weight gain (1.16 (0.94, 1.88) and 1.24 (1.08, 1.43), respectively), and large weight gain (1.39 (1.03, 1.88) and 1.56 (1.27, 1.90), respectively), whereas OR were non-significantly increased in men. Dietary intake of ALA was inversely associated with large (0.80 (0.65, 0.99)) weight gain in women only. CONCLUSIONS These results suggest differential effects of single dietary fatty acids on prospective weight gain in adults.