Sydney School of Public Health, University of Sydney, New South Wales, Australia.
PLoS One. 2013 Oct 16;8(10):e76584. doi: 10.1371/journal.pone.0076584. eCollection 2013.
With often florid allegations about health problems arising from wind turbine exposure now widespread, nocebo effects potentially confound any future investigation of turbine health impact. Historical audits of health complaints are therefore important. We test 4 hypotheses relevant to psychogenic explanations of the variable timing and distribution of health and noise complaints about wind farms in Australia.
All Australian wind farms (51 with 1634 turbines) operating 1993-2012.
Records of complaints about noise or health from residents living near 51 Australian wind farms were obtained from all wind farm companies, and corroborated with complaints in submissions to 3 government public enquiries and news media records and court affidavits. These are expressed as proportions of estimated populations residing within 5 km of wind farms.
There are large historical and geographical variations in wind farm complaints. 33/51 (64.7%) of Australian wind farms including 18/34 (52.9%) with turbine size >1 MW have never been subject to noise or health complaints. These 33 farms have an estimated 21,633 residents within 5 km and have operated complaint-free for a cumulative 267 years. Western Australia and Tasmania have seen no complaints. 129 individuals across Australia (1 in 254 residents) appear to have ever complained, with 94 (73%) being residents near 6 wind farms targeted by anti wind farm groups. The large majority 116/129(90%) of complainants made their first complaint after 2009 when anti wind farm groups began to add health concerns to their wider opposition. In the preceding years, health or noise complaints were rare despite large and small-turbine wind farms having operated for many years.
The reported historical and geographical variations in complaints are consistent with psychogenic hypotheses that expressed health problems are "communicated diseases" with nocebo effects likely to play an important role in the aetiology of complaints.
由于目前广泛存在关于风力涡轮机暴露引起健康问题的华丽指控,因此否认真实存在的健康影响可能会混淆任何未来对风力涡轮机健康影响的调查。因此,对健康投诉的历史审计非常重要。我们测试了 4 个与澳大利亚风力农场健康和噪声投诉的变量时间和分布的心理解释相关的假设。
1993-2012 年运行的所有澳大利亚风力农场(51 个,共 1634 个涡轮机)。
从所有风力发电场公司获得了居住在 51 个澳大利亚风力发电场附近的居民对噪声或健康的投诉记录,并与向 3 次政府公开调查提交的投诉以及新闻媒体记录和法庭宣誓书进行了核实。这些以居住在风力发电场 5 公里范围内的估计人口比例表示。
风力发电场投诉存在很大的历史和地域差异。包括 18 个涡轮机规模>1MW 的风力发电场在内的 51 个澳大利亚风力发电场中的 33 个(64.7%)从未受到噪声或健康投诉。这些 33 个风力发电场估计有 21633 名居民居住在 5 公里范围内,已经无投诉运行了 267 年。西澳大利亚州和塔斯马尼亚州没有任何投诉。澳大利亚各地有 129 人(每 254 名居民中有 1 人)似乎曾经提出过投诉,其中 94 人(73%)是反风力发电场组织针对的 6 个风力发电场附近的居民。绝大多数 116/129(90%)投诉人是在 2009 年反风力发电场组织开始将健康问题纳入更广泛的反对意见之后首次提出投诉的。在此之前,尽管大型和小型风力涡轮机已经运行多年,但健康或噪声投诉很少见。
报告的投诉的历史和地域差异与心理假设一致,即表达的健康问题是“传播疾病”,无真实存在的健康影响可能在投诉的病因学中发挥重要作用。