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The U.S. Food and Drug
Administration said Thursday that it will review wireless-phone
safety following a recently published study that raised concerns
about a heightened risk of brain cancer……The researchers at the
Swedish National Institute for Working Life compared data from 2,200
cancer patients and an equal number of healthy patients. Those who
heavily used wireless phones had a 240 percent increased risk of a
cancerous tumor on the side of the head where they used their phone,
they reported.
T his,
in addition to net neutrality, Digital Restrictions Management, and
open standards is another one of those topics that I'm super
passionate about. Especially after evidence surfaced about a year
ago that the cellco industry was working hard to suppress legitimate
research (smacking of Big Tobacco repeating itself). I'm not about
to play chicken little by saying the sky is falling. By most all
accounts (barring the Swedish one), researchers have routinely said
that a connection between cell phone usage and brain cancer can not
be ruled-in, nor can it be ruled-out and that more research needs to
be done. What is clear however is that big money talks and the FDA's
announcement will most surely cause the entire cell phone industry
to double its ante in hopes of stopping, slowing, or keeping a lid
on whatever bad news might become of this most recent development.
Hopefully, the FDA will be totally transparent in the way it
conducts its study and very willing to take input from the public on
this issue (particularly researchers who know a thing or two about
cell phone radiation and good testing methodologies). As a member of the public that the FDA
is trying to protect, my confidence would easily be bolstered by
total transparency.
Even
I've been hauled to the woodshed for a spanking on this issue by
some ZDNet readers. Short-sighted fools. Life is the most precious
gift of all. Go find some people who are lying on their deathbeds.
I'm certain there are a few shortcuts they wish they hadn't taken.
And that's what a cell phone is. It's a short cut. And the jury on the short cut is
unequivocally out and probably will be for the next ten years. So,
what should you do about it? I'm not saying to stop using cell
phones. But as long as the jury is out, be smart about it. For
example, last April, I published an exhaustive piece called Getting
practical about cell phones and cancer. You should read it because
of the people I interviewed for it. But here are a couple of key
bullet points:
Check the specific absorption
rate (SAR) rating of a phone before you purchase it. It also
might not hurt to check the SAR rating of the phone you
currently own. Check it against CNET's rank ordering of cell
phones and their SAR ratings. Don't be stupid like I was. I fell
for a deal on Amazon.com where I actually got paid cash to take
a cell phone. It turned out to be tied for first place as the
most "radiant" cell phone on the market. If you must have a
phone, consider picking one from the list of least radiant
phones. As a side-note, the Verizon Wireless-provisioned Treo
700w that I'm using has a SAR rating of 1.26 (the maximum
allowable SAR rating in the US is 1.6). Some other smartphones
like the BlackBerries and T-Mobile's Sidekick are listed here.
Cell phones have two SAR ratings. One for your head. The other
is for your body. What does that tell you? Keep the cell phone
away from your head and your body as much as you can. If you're
kids must have a cell phone, make sure they do the same thing.
How much would you hate yourself if your kids developed brain
cancer in 20 years? Keep the phones in a backpack or purse. Not
in your pocket (for you men out there, some studies have
suggested a link between cell phone radiation and sperm cell
damage). Use devices and techniques that keep the phone away
from your head as much as possible. For example,
speakerphone-mode and wired or wireless hands-free devices. If
you really need something on your ear, consider the Bluetooth
headset route (requires a phone that has a Bluetooth radio in it
or that can have one adapted to it). Bluetooth headsets use
radios that are way less powerful than the cell phones regular
radio which has to transmit to the nearest tower. Finally, think hard about why it is the SAR rating isn't
prominently listed on the packaging of cell phones or why the
FDA or some other government institution doesn't require the
publication of a phone's SAR rating in big bold text whenever
it's being advertised. If phones are so safe, then such a
regulation shouldn't negatively impact the interests of those
who'd never prominently display that information without
Other findings:
2-Year Study Finds Possible Cell
Phone Radiation Danger To Brain
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