Laser safety standards were first published in the late 1960’s after the invention of the laser in 1960. It was recognized early on that laser energy could be more hazardous than other forms of light previously encountered. The American Conference of Governmental Industrial Hygienists produced a laser hazards standard in 1968 [1]. The Army, Navy and Air Force also produced standards in 1969 [2, 3]. The American National Committee for the Safe Use of Lasers was formed in 1968 and produced the first National Standard in 1973 [4]. In 1976, the Food and Drug Administration produced a product performance standard for manufacturers of laser devices [5]. These last two standards were the first complete standards that had exposure limits or emission limits for a wide variety of exposure durations and wavelengths.

1.
A guide for uniform industrial hygiene codes or regulations for laser installations, April 1968.
2.
TB MED 279, Control of Hazards to Health from Laser Radiation, Department of the Army Bulletin & Department of the Navy Bulletin, 24 February 1969.
3.
AFM 161-8,
Air Force Manual, Aerospace Medicine, Laser Health Hazards control
, 1 April
1969
.
4.
ANSI Z136.1-1973,
American National Standard for the Safe Use of Lasers
, April 26,
1973
.
5.
21 CFR 1040,
Performance Standard for Light Emitting Products
, January
1976
.
6.
International Commission on Non-Ionizing Radiation Protection
,
Revision of Guidelines on Limits of Exposure to Laser Radiation of Wavelengths between 400 nm and 1.4 μm
,
Health Physics
,
79
(
4
),
431
440
,
2000
.
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