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Are We Lab
Rats For The Cell Phone Industry?
EWeek
Journalist: Maria Seminerio
August 18, 2000
The next time
you use your cell phone -- and if you’re like most business people you see
riding planes, trains and automobiles lately, you’ll probably start dialing
any second now -- think about this:
There have been
some 200 studies conducted so far on the health-safety impact of cell phone use,
but none that purports to examine the impact of long-term use of the devices.
There simply can’t be, yet, after only a few short years of widespread cell
phone adoption by consumers. What is clear, though, is that more and more people
are getting cell phones: Some 100 million Americans use them now, and the
wireless industry estimates there could be 1.6 billion users worldwide by 2005.
So does this
mean that you and I are the lab rats in a gigantic cell phone industry
experiment? It just might.
While none of
the preliminary data proves there is a cancer risk from the radiation cell phone
users are exposed to, this shouldn’t necessarily make people feel any better.
The early findings also don’t prove that there isn’t a cancer risk.
It’s not that
I’m proposing that people throw away their cell phones. But just as with many
other consumer products, from cars to cigarettes, the historical trend has been
for big corporations to cover up and categorically deny any health risks from
their products -- until people started getting hurt. For the first wireless
generation to keep this historical trend in mind probably wouldn’t be a bad
idea, at least until better scientific data comes in.
A look at
the studies
Let’s
look at the facts so far: The World Health Organization put out an advisory in
June saying people should consider limiting the length of cell phone calls, and
not allowing children to use the devices at all, to limit exposure to radiation
that may or may not cause cancer. The advisory was based on the first data from
an ongoing study of users in 10 countries seeking links between mobile phone
radiation and head and neck cancers. The research won’t be finished, however,
until 2003.
Meanwhile, a
study by Swedish researchers earlier this year indicated a possible link between
cell phone use and the formation of brain tumors in the areas near the ears. But
this data, the Swedish researchers said, can’t be viewed as conclusive proof
of a cancer link.
What’s the
best way to protect yourself if you’re a heavy cell phone user now? The WHO
advises taking a common sense approach. Pregnant women and young children face a
higher cancer risk from radiation of all types (which is why a pregnant woman
can’t have dental X-rays done). So avoiding the devices if you’re pregnant,
and keeping your kids away from them, can’t hurt, the organization says.
As for other
adults who use the devices frequently, the organization stops short of saying
they should definitely cut down on their use, advising people do so only if
they’re “concerned” about possible health risks.
Meanwhile, most
of us in this hyper-connected generation, whether we want to or not, are taking
part in the experiment that will determine once and for all whether cell phone
dependency leads to cancer.
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