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Are
Mobile Phones Safe?
IEEE Spectrum
By Kenneth R. Foster, University of Pennsylvania & John E. Moulder, Medical
College of Wisconsin
August, 2000
A
motorist using a wireless telephone might be worried about having an accident,
even while being reassured that if one were to happen, he or she could call for
help. Recently some scientists and lay people have expressed alarm at another
possible danger--that the use of mobile phones itself may harm the user's
health, perhaps even causing cancer.
There
is good reason to be concerned. The widespread use of hand-held mobile phones
means that many people routinely place radio frequency (RF) transmitters against
their heads--in some European and Asian countries, a majority of the adult
population does so. That fact alone would warrant examination of the safety of
this form of radiant energy.
Concern
about the possibility of mobile phone's ill effects on health took shape in
mid-1992 in a U.S. court. A lawsuit filed in Florida by David Reynard alleged
that the use of a cell phone had caused his wife's fatal brain cancer. The suit
was dismissed by a Federal court in 1995 for lack of valid scientific evidence,
and similar suits since have been no more successful. But they have raised
questions for which no entirely satisfactory answers existed at the time they
were filed. Driven in part by these disturbing allegations, a new wave of
research in the United States and elsewhere is exploring possible links between
cell phone radiation and cancer. Brain cancer, the topic of this article, is not
the only health concern, but it dominates public discussion. Now, nearly eight
years after the Reynard suit, a substantial body exists of pertinent scientific
evidence.
Fields
and frequency
Wireless communication systems operate at several frequencies in the
electromagnetic spectrum. In the United States, cell phones operate in two main
frequency ranges--the older systems near 850 MHz, and the newer personal
communications services, or PCS, near 1900 MHz. European mobile phones use the
Global System for Mobile Communications (GSM), a different technology than most
U.S. phones, and operate at slightly different frequencies, near 900 MHz and
1800 MHz. Many other applications transmit energy in nearby frequency bands.
Energy
in this frequency range is called non-ionizing because the photon energy is
insufficient to knock electrons from atoms in living tissue, a source of serious
biological damage from radiation such as X-rays. The most apparent biological
effects of RF energy at cell phone frequencies are due to heating. Many
mechanisms not due to heating have been demonstrated, too; but those well enough
understood to be analyzed quantitatively are found to produce observable effects
only at very high exposure levels.
Exposure
standards in the United States and most Western countries are designed to give
protection against all identified hazards of RF energy. At present, these are
associated only with excessive tissue heating, which is hardly a likely problem
with low-powered mobile phones. Analog hand-held phones radiate 600 mW or less
of time averaged power, and many digital models produce 125 mW. However, most
modern phones' output is adaptively controlled by the base station: the handset
constantly adjusts its power to provide the minimum signal needed to communicate
reliably with the base station.
Research,
Old and New
Since World War II, there has been a massive amount of research on the
biological effects of RF energy, nearly all of it funded by governments. Most of
this research has involved fields at 915 and 2450 MHz, close to the frequencies
used by mobile phones.
But,
despite early claims by cell phone makers, little of this research proves that
mobile phones are safe. Few of the studies on whether RF exposure is dangerous
to animal tissue have involved standard toxicology work--the sort that a
chemical or a pharmaceutical company would do to gain regulatory approval for a
new product. In addition, little of the research deals specifically with the
kinds of pulse-modulated energy transmitted by newer generations of digital
phones or with the exposure conditions typical of those produced by cell phones.
The
body of research is controversial in several respects. It includes many reports
of biological effects of RF fields on cells and animals, sometimes at low
exposure levels, which are poorly understood and often not reproducible. It also
includes a scattering of reports of human health effects from low-level exposure
to RF fields. Standards-setting committees, while acknowledging this research,
have concluded that it provides insufficient basis for exposure guidelines.
Spurred
by the Reynard lawsuit and its attendant publicity, a new round of studies began
in the mid-'90s, largely funded by mobile phone makers and mainly focused on
carcinogenesis and mobile phones. One notable effort was the US $27 million
Wireless Technology Research (WTR) program based in Washington, D.C. It was
funded mostly by U.S. phone manufacturers but operated at arm's length from
industry. That effort came to an end in December 1999 with no official
pronouncement and only a handful of published studies, some of which are
discussed below.
Many
other research programs in other countries are under way, sponsored by either
industry or government. One review of the issue, presented at a meeting in Erice,
Sicily in November 1999, identified more than 200 ongoing and recently completed
studies related to possible health hazards of RF energy.
Looking
for a Link
Identifying links between cancer and environmental exposure of any kind is
surprisingly difficult because of the absence of a single cause of cancer and
for a variety of other reasons. Even if mobile phones had no connection to
cancer, thousands of users would develop brain cancer every year, given the
hundreds of millions of mobile phone users around the world and given so-called
background rates of brain cancer (in the United States, it strikes about six in
100 000 people per year). Identifying an effect of cell phones against this
background of the disease requires carefully designed studies.
When
investigating suspected carcinogens, health agencies rely mostly on two sorts of
studies: epidemiology studies, which involve statistical analyses of health
records, and standardized tests, made on animals. On neither front does recent
evidence support links between mobile phones and brain cancer.
In
1996, in the first follow-up study to Reynard's brain cancer allegations, the
health records of more than 250 000 mobile phone users were reviewed by Kenneth
Rothman, a senior epidemiologist at Epidemiology Research Institute, in Newton
Lower Falls, Mass. This industry-sponsored WTR study reported no difference in
mortality between the users of hand-held portable phones, where the antenna is
placed close to the head, and mobile cellular phones, where the antenna is
mounted on the vehicle, resulting in lower RF exposure. In a later, follow-up
study, the same investigators examined the causes of death among nearly 300,000
mobile phone users (including some from the previous study) in several U.S.
cities. "The only category of cause of death for which there was an
indication of increasing risk with increasing minutes of use," the
investigators reported in a November 1999 letter in the Journal of the American
Medical Association, "was motor vehicle collisions."
Other
epidemiology studies have been mostly or entirely negative. In a study that
received extensive press coverage even before it was published, Lennart Hardell
and his colleagues at the Örebro Medical Centre in Örebro, Sweden, assessed
mobile phone use by 209 Swedish brain tumor patients in comparison to 425
healthy controls. The study, funded by the Swedish Medical Research Council, was
negative in virtually all respects.
In
reporting the study, the lay media focused on one finding: users of mobile
phones who had developed certain types of brain tumors were more likely to
report having used the phone on the side of the head with the tumor than on the
other side. But the association was weak. It was not statistically significant
and might easily have been a result of recall bias--a well-established tendency
of subjects to remember exposures to something more readily if they developed a
disease. The brain cancer patients in Hardell's study knew their diagnosis
before they were asked about their use of mobile phones.
Brain
cancer takes years or decades to develop, and these studies say nothing about
future risks. Detecting small or long-term cancer risks is not an easy task.
Detecting small increases in risk would require large studies that are hard to
control and usually are controversial in their interpretation. Any valid study
would also have to assess an individual's use of mobile phones over a decade or
more, an assessment complicated by the rapid technological developments in this
industry.
Answers
from animal studies
Animal studies, the other main source of information used in cancer risk
assessment, also have not supported a link between mobile phones and cancer.
Exposing
rats to pulse-modulated 837 MHz RF energy, similar to that emitted by some
digital cell phones, does not cause or promote brain cancer. That was the
finding of a Motorola-funded study designed specifically to look for brain
cancer and reported in a 1999 paper by W. R. "Ross" Adey, now at the
University of California at Riverside. More recently, in April 2000, Adey
reported the same finding for continuous wave RF, such as that emitted by analog
cell phones. And in a 1999 meeting report, Bernard Zook of George Washington
University in Washington, D.C., confirmed all of Adey's findings. The other
studies in the table were not focused on brain cancer, but they evaluated the
animals for the disease and would have noted a pronounced increase in this
disease had it occurred.
Animal
studies, while easier to control than epidemiology studies, have uncertain
relevance to human health. For example, former WTR chief George Carlo pointed
out to IEEE Spectrum that none of the animal studies done to date has adequately
mimicked the head-only exposure of a user of a mobile telephone; rather, the
animals are exposed to whole-body radiation. A countervailing argument is that
whole-body exposures are more likely to produce toxic effects than partial body
exposures. Issues of this nature involve professional judgment about which
experts routinely disagree.
Exceeding
the limits
The focus on mobile phones' health effects has intensified the scrutiny of
exposure to RF energy in the United States. The FCC limits peak exposure to 1.6
W/kg of tissue averaged over any single gram of tissue (or 1.6 mW/g). European
limits are less restrictive, specifying 1.6 W/kg averaged over 10 grams.
Mobile
telephone handsets operate at low power levels, but the antenna, which radiates
about 600 mW for an analog mobile phone and 125 mW for a digital unit, is placed
very close to the head, which can push exposure levels close to the regulatory
limits. A complicating factor is that the exposure depends greatly on the exact
position of the handset with respect to the head and on the exact shape and
electrical characteristics of the head--all variable quantities. Moreover, the
exposure cannot be measured directly in the head of the user, but has to be
estimated by computer models or measurements in tanks of liquids in the shape of
the head.
Manufacturers
can reduce exposure by tweaking handset design, up to a point. Significant
reductions in power create the need for more closely spaced base stations, which
are unpopular with residents in many areas. Moving antennas and other circuit
elements farther from the user's head might enlarge the handset, which would
work against consumer demands for small phones.
Industry
and academic investigators have reported data showing that mobile phones on the
market meet regulatory limits, by and large. There have been some exceptions,
though. In 1998, the FCC announced that Sony Electronics Inc. would recall 60
000 cell phones that exceeded FCC exposure limits.
Controversy continues
Many areas of contention remain. For instance, in a 1995 study that received
wide media attention, Henry Lai and colleagues at the University of Washington
in Seattle reported exposing rats to RF radiation at an average whole-body
exposure of 1 W/kg of body weight. The result: breaks in their brain cells'
DNA--an indicator of potential cancer causing effects.
But
more recent studies have cast doubts on this finding. Attempts to confirm Lai's
results, by a Motorola-funded group led by Joseph Roti Roti at Washington
University in St. Louis, were unsuccessful. A Belgian government-funded group
led by Luc Vershaeve has reported that similar RF exposure to rats does not
cause DNA strand breaks in other types of cells. Moreover, the Washington
University group has identified an experimental artifact that might have
accounted for Lai's positive results. Lai continues to defend his original
studies.
Scientific
data can spark public controversies even before they are published, let alone
digested by health agencies. Take the recent epidemiological study by Joshua
Muscat, a research scientist at the American Health Foundation in New York City.
Results of this WTR funded study were presented at a scientific meeting in June
1999 but so far they have not been published in any detail.
In
a Canadian TV interview four months later, former WTR chief Carlo, referring to
the Muscat study, said that "those who use wireless phones have a higher
chance of dying from brain cancer" and pointed to "statistically
significant" increases in some rare subtypes of the disease.
Muscat's
own conclusions, though, were more guarded. In his conference paper abstract, he
wrote that his study "did not find evidence that cell phone use increases
the risk of brain cancer..." though "there remains some
ambiguity" in how to interpret an apparent increase in one kind of brain
cancer. Muscat told IEEE Spectrum that his research has been submitted for
publication. Until it has been published, his results cannot be independently
evaluated.
Are mobile phones safe?
The epidemiological results, so far, are certainly inconsistent with any large
increase in risk (a doubling or more) of brain cancer from use of cell
phones--the implication of the original Reynard lawsuit. Nor do the animal
studies show clear-cut carcinogenic effects. However, the epidemiological
studies lack the sensitivity to detect small increases in risk, and the
relevance of animal studies to human health is uncertain--both familiar problems
with carcinogen risk assessment.
In
a document posted on the Web in February 2000, the U.S. Food and Drug
Administration noted that "There is currently insufficient scientific basis
for concluding either that wireless communication technologies are safe or that
they pose a [health] risk to millions of users."
The
term "safe" brims with legal, regulatory, and ethical implications.
Health agencies on the whole shy away from pronouncing technologies safe, but
instead evaluate evidence for possible hazards. For example, the International
Agency for Research on Cancer (IARC), in Lyon, France, has received about 8
million euros from the European Commission for a large epidemiological study of
cell phone use in relation to head and neck cancers. Ten countries will
participate in the study, which is foreseen as including 1500 cases and 1500
healthy controls. The research is in its pilot phase and is expected to be
completed within three years. But even with extensive data, IARC virtually never
pronounces an agent to be a "noncarcinogen," and therefore is unlikely
to do so with RF energy.
In
contrast, mobile phone manufacturers must prove, not that their products are
safe, but that they meet exposure limits--a different matter entirely. The
standards that set limits on exposure to energy from phones were developed
largely on the basis of whole-body exposure data and engineering considerations.
More
research is clearly needed on the biological and biophysical effects of
near-field exposure. A better-defined threshold for hazard might even lead to
relaxed exposure limits for handsets. Most current research is going on outside
the United States. Michael Repacholi, director of a project on health effects of
electromagnetic fields at the World Health Organization in Geneva, estimates
that there is about $100 million in ongoing research on possible health effects
of mobile telephones, very little of which is being done within the United
States.
But
U.S. industry and government have not given up. In June 2000, the Cellular
Telephone Industry Association (CTIA) and the U. S. Food and Drug Administration
announced an agreement, under which the CTIA would fund a $1 million research
program, with FDA input, on mobile phones and health. This funding is dwarfed by
the huge costs of toxicology and epidemiology studies; it will pay for limited
follow-up studies to address issues raised by the WTR program.
Whatever
the outcome of the latest generation of studies, debate over the health effects
of mobile phones will continue. Mobile phones will join other forms of
electrical technology, such as police radar sets, computer display terminals,
and power lines, that have triggered public fears because of their
electromagnetic fields. Such issues are very difficult and time-consuming to
resolve. How to respond appropriately to public fears, identifying any real
hazard while avoiding unproductive controversy, is not a purely scientific
matter but a question with deep social aspects.
In
a bid to stay ahead of the public debate CTIA recently revealed that by the end
of 2000 its members would begin including SAR information with new models of
phones. The data and some explanatory language will appear as a pamphlet inside
boxes of new phones, a CTIA spokesperson told IEEE Spectrum. SAR data is already
available at an FCC website [www.fcc.gov/oet/rfsafety], but that site is very
difficult to navigate. Even if the CTIA initiative makes SAR data more easily
accessible, it is is unclear how consumers can make use of the data.
Meanwhile,
a mobile phone user with health concerns has simple remedies: use an external
earpiece that keeps the phone away from the head, decrease phone use, or avoid
using the phones in areas where the signal is poor--a weak signal from the base
station causes modern handsets to increase their broadcast power. Neither of us
would recommend such measures on health grounds, but people can decide for
themselves whether to take such precautions.
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