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Cellphones
Are But the cell phone industry said Lais research techniques were not commonly accepted and that people have over-interpreted their data. The industry maintains that the results have never been duplicated (Lai and Singh disagree), and that the overwhelming scientific evidence to date shows there is no health risk. But the European Union is funding independent research into possible heath risks of electromagnetic radiation, including cell phone signals. In December, preliminary results of work by 12 groups in seven countries found that radiation at some cell phone levels damages DNA in a laboratory setting. The effortcalled
REFLEXstudied radiation effects on animal and human cells. The
scientists reported a significant increase in DNA damage. This damage
could not always be repaired by the injured cell. The REFLEX study has not been reported in U.S. media Wake
Up Call -Prof Henry Lai's
story Special Report by Alasdair Philips When I was a child,
back in the early 1950s, I was bought a new pair of shoes. The manufacturer
had just introduced a wonderful new pedascope machine to check how
well your shoes fitted your feet. Asbestos has been strictly controlled since 1970, and the use of most dangerous types banned. Despite this, deaths from mesothelioma (an asbestos induced cancer of the pleura/lungs) are rising consistently and the U.K. death rate is not expected to peak until about 2020. The time between the first exposure and death is now accepted as often being between 20 and 50 years. Most environmental cancers in adults take longer than ten years from initiation to detection. The eating of BSE infected meat possibly causing CJD many years later is another example. Mobile phones Mobile phones emit microwaves. If microwave or pulsed low frequency electromagnetic fields (EMFs) do turn out to be carcinogenic, even if we backdate it five years, we should not be expecting to see much in the way of induced cancers for another ten years. In the meantime we discover that almost all the major phone manufacturers are quietly and prudently patenting EMF reducing cases and aerials. Despite the impression that mobile-phone companies give in their literature, little work has been done on long term human health implications of mobile-phone use. Current mobile-phone users are acting as involuntary, and often unsuspecting, test subjects. Past research into microwave radiation effects on health, including recent cell-phone studies, certainly give cause for concern. Even Dr John Stather, the Assistant Director of the NRPB stated: "Until recently we believed any harmful effects from microwaves were due to their heating effects, which would be negligible at the low powers used by mobile phones. Now there might be another effect at work and we are much less certain." (Sunday Times 21 September 1997) Public awareness Public awareness of possible dangers was probably triggered originally by the Reynard brain tumour case in 1992. About eight lawsuits alleging that cellular phones caused brain tumours have been filed in the USA. Although no cases has so far succeeded they have set the stage and raised safety questions in many people's minds. It has raised old spectres such as the thalidomide tragedy - the result of a product being used widely before adequate long term research had been carried out. The first part of a major new study of 11,000 mobile phone users was released on 14th May 1998 [1] and although ignored by main BBC News programmes, it was given front page banner headlines by the Daily Express on Friday 15th May. This showed little difference for heating, fatigue and headache effects between NMT analogue and GSM digital phones, but did highlight a three to six-fold increase in fatigue and headaches for heavy mobile handset users and up to a 48-fold increase in the sensation of heat on the user's ear, face or head. The first of the study's more detailed findings were shown at the Biolelectromagnetics Society (BEMS) Annual Meeting in Florida in June 1998 and showed significantly more concentration and memory loss symptoms in regular users of the GSM digital phone handsets. Only a week earlier news had been reported that on Tuesday 5th May the Cumbran Magistrates Court issued a Summons under section 10 of the UK Consumer Protection Act, 1987 for Roger Coghill to bring a private criminal action against a retail distributor of Orange and Motorola mobile phones. The Magistrate ruled that there was enough scientific evidence (before the new Mild evidence mentioned above) to issue a Summons and allow the case to go forward. His action claims that the distributors failed to affix required labels to their handsets warning of possible health risks to users from prolonged conversations as is required by the 1987 CP Act as there is now reasonable evidence of handset use causing possible adverse health effects. He has now filed an updated claim and the pre-trial review is scheduled to be heard on 2nd September 1998. [2] A research letter published in the Lancet [3] by a German team showed a statistically significant increase on blood pressure in people who used a GSM phone for 30 minutes. Although the rise was only about 5% it showed an important biological effect and received national media attention. Exposure levels Despite what some mobile phone companies are saying, mobile phones do radiate microwaves similar to those used in a microwave oven to cook food. Between 20% and 80% of the energy is absorbed by the user's head. The percentage absorbed depends on the design of the phone, type of aerial or antenna (the stubby ones which you can not extend are worse for pushing energy into the user's head), and how far it is to the nearest base-station mast. Thermal exposure results
in a measurable and significant rise in body tissue temperature and
is the basis for cooking food in microwave ovens. When maximum levels
were set in the 1950s, they were based on field levels the human body
could withstand without causing a 1°C rise in body temperature.
The possibility of non-thermal effects was discounted. Most national
and international bodies (including the UK National Radiological Protection
Board) set a rise of 1°C (6 minutes average for local exposure,
15 mins. for whole body) as the maximum permissible long-term temperature
rise, although some chose to set the figure lower than this, between
0.2°C Non-thermal exposure means that no energy is transferred which could cause a measurable temperature rise. Athermal means that although some heating energy is transferred, the blood etc. will transfer the heat away from the tissue such that the overall temperature rise is limited to below that classified for thermal exposure. Despite considerable evidence in published scientific literature for biological effects of electro-magnetic radiation in the RF/MW range of the spectrum at specific absorption rates (SARs) far too low to produce a heating response, this still continues to be the case. However, the conclusions section of the NRPB "Doll Report", on non-ionising radiation effects, states: "Animal studies conducted at frequencies above about 100kHz have provided some evidence for effects on tumour incidence...". [4] Cancer implications Although brain tumour cases have been rising fairly steadily over the last fifteen years, these are not the most likely outcome of high levels of mobile communications handset use. In 1998 a study reported that brain tumour incidence was rising in Western Australia and questioned whether mobile phone use might be responsible [5]. However, if there are long term large-scale cancer implications, then it is more likely that they will be adult myeloid leukaemias and multiple melanomas. Back in the early 1980s Sam Milham reported excess leukaemias among amateur radio operators, with deaths from acute and chronic myeloid leukaemias nearly three times higher than expected. We do know of a number of digital (GSM) phone users who have developed Hodgkin's Disease in the lymph glands in their neck on the side where they normally used their phones for a couple of hours each day [6]. In 1980, Dr John Holt had a letter published [7]. This showed that between 1951-59, 50% of patients with CML in Queensland survived for 55 months following diagnosis. In 1960 and 1961 three large TV broadcast stations were commissioned in the area. In the period 1963-67, 50% of patients with CML only survived for 21 months. This dramatic change could not be explained by any medical personnel, protocol or therapy changes. In the mid-1980s Stanislaw Szmigielski reported that Polish military personnel exposed to RF energy showed elevated leukaemia levels. He has just published a 1996 update [8]. This is a study of all Polish military personnel for 15 years (1971-85), approximately 128,000 people each year. Of these about 3700 (3%) were considered to be occupationally exposed to radio-frequency and / or microwave radiation. The largest increases were found for chronic myelocytic leukaemia (CML), with an astounding increase (Odds Ratio) of 13.9 (95% CI 6.72-22.12, p<0.001), acute myeloblastic leukaemia (AML) with an OR of 8.62 (95% CI 3.54-13.67, p<0.001), and non-Hodgkin's lymphomas with an OR of 5.82 (95% CI 3.54-13.67, p<0.001). In 1996 Lai & Singh showed single and double DNA strand breaks in brain cells of rats exposed to 2.45GHz SARs of 1.2 W/Kg (comparable with levels in the heads of mobile phone users), giving rise to real concerns. [9] If someone is completely healthy, and has a strong immune system, then mobile-phone use may well not give them long-term health problems. Some people can smoke twenty cigarettes per day for fifty years and not develop lung cancer, and yet the dangers of smoking are now generally accepted, even by the manufacturers. It has been repeatedly shown that a few minutes exposure to cell phone type radiation can transform a 5% active cancer into a 95% active cancer for the duration of the exposure and for a short time afterwards. [10] A team of scientists funded by the Australian communications giant, Telstra, to investigate claimed links between cellular phones and cancer has turned up probably the most significant finding of adverse health effects yet. The study looked at 200 mice, half exposed and half not, to pulsed digital phone radiation. The work was conducted at the Royal Adelaide Hospital by Dr Michael Repacholi, Professor Tony Basten, Dr Alan Harris and statistician Val Gebski, and it revealed a highly-significant doubling of cancer rates in the exposed group. [11] The mice were subject to GSM-type pulsed microwaves at a power-density roughly equal to a cell-phone transmitting for two thirty minute periods each day; this was a pulsed transmission as from a digital cell-phone handset. Using NRPB figures most GSM digital cell-phones will be putting between 10 and 30 times more radiation into the user's head than the Repacholi mice were subject to! [12] If there are cancer connections with the use of mobile phones, they are most likely to be expressed in adult leukaemias which typically take between 10 and 30 years to appear and be diagnosed. It is therefore unlikely that the trend will start to be seen for at least another five years, although the harm is being done now. Short term exposure of rats is no answer. Cancer is being increasingly recognised as an organisational systems problem, and no short term speeded up animal experiments are likely to give the same results as extended period chronic exposure to the human bio-system. Initial (shorter term)
problems with very important health and work efficiency implications
We now receive frequent calls from regular mobile-phone users reporting Maximum exposure levels At cellular telephone
frequency bands of 900MHz and 1.8GHz, the current U.K. NRPB investigation
levels raised the U.K. permitted levels to 10 Watts per Kg in the
head. The 1991 USA ANSI/IEEE C95.1 guidelines set the SAR at 1.6 W/Kg,
and the CENELEC pre-standard states 2 W/Kg for the public. GSM Cellular-phones
can deliver well over 2 W/Kg into head tissue during their output
pulses, but they are said to comply because the average power is only
about one-eighth of the pulse power (GSM & PCN digital phones),
as up to eight calls share one channel using Time Division Multiple
Access (TDMA) with each handset pulsing in one of eight time slots.
Unlike the earlier analogue phones, the digital GSM ones emit a series
of short pulses at a basic repetition rate of 217Hz. Pulsed microwaves
have been shown to be more biologically active than continuous radiation
of the same frequency and power level. Take an operating digital GSM
mobile-phone near an ordinary medium wave radio and you will hear
a buzzing noise. The NRPB, and others, average the power from a digital phone over 1 second, and so divide the pulse power by eight. They correctly argue that the tissue has time to cool down between pulses, and then go on to deduce that no damage will therefore take place. This is similar to saying that placing a hammer on a cell (an egg, for example) exerting a small steady force, will produce the same effect as hitting the egg, using eight times the force briefly once a second. As most practical engineers know, when trying to loosen a stuck nut and bolt, the effect of constant pressure on the spanner is FAR LESS than when tapping the spanner with a hammer. In 1993, as the NRPB raised its permitted microwave levels, two military research bases in the USA reduced their permitted levels of radio frequency exposure (30 MHz to 100 GHz) from 100 W/m2 (10 mW//cm2) down to 1 W/m2 (0.1 mW/cm2 or 100 µW/cm2 ). This is because they acknowledged that there is now an overwhelming body of published evidence for the existence of non-thermal biological effects of high-frequency radiation. [16] Some non-thermal effects Important non-thermal biological effects have been demonstrated which could account for the development of cancer, asthma and the lowering of male fertility. Cell membranes carry charge and surface receptors (usually proteins) are highly charged. Signals are transduced into the cell interior where growth, development and cell division are regulated by processes which involve ions. These features have been shown to alter their behaviour in the presence of imposed external electromagnetic fields. Documented changes include alteration of the permeability of the cell membrane, alteration of the signal transduction processes which regulate cell behaviour and involve calcium ions, ornithine decarboxylase, protein kinase C and cAMP. One study has indicated that microwaves can alter DNA synthesis, enzyme activity, ion transport, cell proliferation and the cell cycle [17]. Low frequencies (generated
by the pulsed nature of GSM cell-phone signals - 217, 32 & 2 Hz)
have been previously shown to lower lymphocytes ability to mark
cancer cells and to depress the ability of other lymphocytes to destroy
the 'marked' aberrant cells. Low level microwaves have also been shown
to alter both the immune response [18] and EEG activity [19] in rabbits.
Microwaves at only 1 mW/cm2 (one-tenth of the NRPB Guidance level)
have been shown to affect cAMP-independent kinase activity [20], and
calcium ion (Ca2+) efflux from chick cerebral hemispheres [21]. Continuous
digital GSM phone operation near fertilised chicken eggs kill most
of the embryos [22]. Dr Peter French of the
Centre for Immunology, St Vincent's Hospital, Sydney, Australia, has
been carrying out experiments on a range of human and animal cell
lines using 835 MHz exposure at 4.9 mW/cm2, 3 times per day for 7
days. He has shown effects on cell growth, shape, secretion of histamine
and gene transcription. Dr French is the immediate past President
of the Australia and New Zealand Society for Cell Biology. [24] Almost all the major manufacturers have now patented and produced low radiation into the user's head models! Base station masts There is currently growing public concern about the number of base station masts that are being erected, and the effect these may have on both health and on property values. The field strengths from masts is low and is unlikely to be more of a problem than any other form of RF data communications., however increasing worries are surfacing about all levels of RF energy, especially when digital signal bursts are transmitted. When one looks at what few epidemiological studies that have been done to date on RF/MW(radio frequency electromagnetic energy) human exposure, there is ample evidence of adverse health effects to warrant concern. The UK NRPB regularly uses the words "substantiated", "firm", and "proven" evidence regarding the results of epidemiological (i.e. of populations of people) studies. Epidemiological studies on human populations do not, and generally can not, look for "proof" or "substantiation" but increases in incidence of a disease, or relative risk ratios. Epidemiological studies on tobacco and asbestos did not "prove" that these carcinogens cause cancer; they do show, however, a significantly increased risk of developing cancer from exposure. This is not "substantiation", but that did not prevent the health authorities from taking corrective action. It is unfortunate that with electromagnetic radiation, however, industry and its supporters insist an absolute cause - effect relationship must be proven before corrective action be taken. The following recent studies do not substantiate anything in relation to exposure to RF/MW; they are dealing with the increase in incidence of adverse health effects such as cancer. They are, however, relevant and should be taken into account when formulating policy: a) A preliminary study by Dr Bruce Hocking compared cancer rates in three municipalities within a 4 km radius of Sydney TV towers with rates in adjacent areas further away. The study found children living within the 4 km radius had a relative risk of 1.6 for leukaemia, compared with the control group. The RR for mortality was higher at 2.3, and highest at 2.8 for lymphoblastic leukaemia. [25] The calculated power levels were around 0.02 to 8 mW/cm2. b) In 1987, a similar study identified higher rates of cancer among those living near the TV and radio broadcast towers in Hawaii. Drs. Anderson and Henderson of the Hawaii Department of Health found in residential areas with 12 communication towers, a relative risk for cancer, including leukaemia, of 1.375 (37.5% increase). [26] c) A study of cancers around the BBC Sutton Coldfield transmitter mast (Dolk, et al, 1997) found a statistically significant doubling of adult leukaemia within 2 km, and a significant decline in risk with distance up to 10 km from the mast was also found for skin cancer. The decline with distance was also observed at 20 other high power masts, but no significant increase in overall incidence was found. [27] d) An earlier study in 1982, conducted by Dr Morton of the University of Oregons Health Science Centre found parallel trends in his study of cancer and broadcast radiation in Portland. [28] e) Dr. Stanislaw Szmigielski, a leading epidemiologist with the Centre for Radiobiology and Radiation Safety at the Military Institute of Hygiene and Epidemiology, Warsaw, Poland has been the team leader for an on-going study of the health effects of RF/MW exposure of military personnel in Poland for the whole military population. His research found that young military personnel exposed to RF/MW radiation had more than eight times the expected rate of leukaemia and lymphoma. Careful surveys of exposure revealed that 80 - 85% of the personnel were exposed to an average of less than 42 microwatts/sq. cm., with a median point near 7 microwatts/sq. cm. [8] f) Quellet-Hellstrom and Stewart (1993) found a statistically significant 3.3 fold increase of miscarriage amongst U.S. physiotherapists using microwave diathermy compared to a non-exposed control group. The incidence increased with the number of monthly treatments, which could suggest a cumulative effect. With about 10 treatments per month, the exposure was about 0.04 to 0.56 microwatts/sq. cm. [29] g) Shandala et. al. (1979) found that calcium ion efflux varies in living animal cells at 10 micro watts/sq.cm. and this level also produces brain activity changes. [30] h) Prof. von Klitzing (1995) found changes to human brain EEG with a signal of 217 Hz modulation on a 150 megahertz (MHz) carrier with an external exposure of about 2.5 microwatts/sq.cm. [31] (i) Professor John Goldsmith, at Ben Gurion University of the Negev, Israel, has collected evidence of several exposures to microwaves which produced elevated risks of a wide range of cancers, including childhood leukaemia in children of staff, and cancers in the staff and partners at the U.S. Embassy in Moscow and other eastern European U.S. embassies. These cancers were associated with a reported maximum exposure of between 5 and 15 microwatts/sq.cm. and mean exposures between 1 and 2.4 mW/cm2, recorded near the outside walls of the embassy. Personnel exposures inside the building were estimated between 0.2 and 0.5 mW/cm2. [32] j) To quote from Dr. Neil Cherry's (New Zealand) recent book: [33] With these and dozens of other epidemiological studies of large populations and large numbers of workers occupationally exposed to RF/MW radiation, showing statistically significant increases of a wide spectrum of cancers, there can be little or no doubt that chronic low level exposure to RF/MW radiation produces increased cancer risk. k) The Latvian pulsed radar station study mentioned earlier in this talk. [13] Who can the public turn to for advice? Part of my remit was to answer the question whether the public should be suspicious of soothing statements from people responsible for advice on these matters. Dr. Alastair McKinlay, of the UK NRPB, is the vice-Chair of the Expert Groupset up by the European Commission. He is quoted as stating: What is now required is a lot more research in the microwave frequency part of the electromagnetic spectrum, where mobile phones operate. This is not because there is concern about health effects, but that such research makes sense to quell any public concern. [34] The E.C. Committee has recommended a 24 million ECU (about £20m) funding programme for research into mobile phone safety. Dr. John Stather, Asst. Director of the NRPB was recently quoted in several press articles [35] as admitting: Until recently, we believed any harmful effects from microwaves were due to their heating effects, which would be negligible at the low powers used by mobile phones. Now their might be another effect at work and we are much less certain. Conclusions Powerwatch believes that, although much more research needs doing, regular mobile-phone use is likely to have adverse health consequences in many people who use them. The newer, digital, ones are likely to have more biological effects than the older, analogue, ones. Although existing evidence does not yet conclusively prove that there are any long-term adverse health implications, we feel that we need to advise people to use them as little as possible. http://www.powerwatch.org Alasdair Philips ([email protected]) |
Mobile
phone use: It's time to take precautions. An overview of
the Mobile Phone health issue by Don Maisch, JACNEM Vol. 20 No. 1 April
2001:3-10. (Downloadable PDF) Children
and mobile phone use: Is there a health risk? Comments
from experts as to why children should limit their use of mobile phones.
(Downloadable PDF) NEW:
A Corporate
Risk Assessment of RF Bioeffects Studies Revelant to the Use of Mobile
Phones by Children: Is it really science?
Paper presented at the International Scientific Conference, CHILDREN
with LEUKAEMIA: Incidence, causal mechanisms and prevention, Church
House, Westminster, London, 6-10 September 2004. (Downloadable
PDF added August 31, 2004) NEW:
The ICNIRP
Guidelines: RF risk assessment built on a house of cards. Paper
presented at the Radiation Research Trust scientific meeting, Aintree
Racecourse, Liverpool, September 24, 2004. (Downloadable
PDF added August 31, 2004) NEWSPEAK:
Redefining the Precautionary Principle A
guide for Homeowners: EMFs from Electrical Wiring
and Appliances. Downloadable PDF added May 13,
2004) Chronic
Fatigue Syndrome - Is prolonged exposure to environmental level powerline
frequency electromagnetic fields a co-factor to consider in treatment?
D. Maisch, B. Rapley, R.E. Rowland, J. Podd. JACNEM Vol. 17 No. 2
December 1998:29-35. Published
version available on the ACNEM web site. Changes
in Health Status in a Group of CFS and CF Patients Following Removal
of Excessive 50 Hz Magnetic Field Exposure. D Maisch,
J Podd, B Rapley. JACNEM Vol. 21 No. 1 April 2002:15-19. (Downloadable
PDF)
Reducing
the level of 50 Hz Magnetic Fields Lessens Symptoms of Chronic Fatigue
and Improves Sleep. 2nd International Workshop on "Biological
effects of Electromagnetic fields", 7-11 October 2002, Rohodes,
Greece. John Podd & Don Maisch. The
Ross House Electrical Substation: Workcare compensation
case, Melbourne Victoria, Australia, 1991-1992 (Summary).
A 'hard copy' 114 page report compiled in Jan-Feb 1999 is available
from EMFacts Consultancy. Pseudo-iron
deficiency in a French population living near high-voltage transmission
lines: a dilemma for clinicians
by Eric Hachulla, Marie-Therese Caulier-Leleu, Odile Fontaine, Lofti
Mehianoui, Paul Pelerin; European Journal of Internal Medicine, Volume
(issue): 11 (6) 2000. A 'hard copy' 28 page report compiled on this
research is available from EMFacts Consultancy. EMFacts
case histories that indicate prolonged exposure to environmental
level powerline frequency electromagnetic fields can impair immune
system function. Powerline
Frequency Electromagnetic Fields and Human Health - Is it time to
end further research?
An Overview of Three Recent Studies. D Maisch, B Rapley JACNEM Vol
17 No 1 June 1998:5-16. Published
version available on the ACNEM web site. Melatonin,
Tamoxifen, 50 - 60 Hertz Electromagnetic Fields and Breast Cancer.
D Maisch. An Australian Senate discussion paper. 27 October 1997 (published
in Hansard). Setting
radio frequency/Microwave (RF/MW) exposure guidelines to protect workers
and the public: Russia and the West in major conflict.
D Maisch, January 2000. Submissions
to Standards Australia on adopting the ICNIRP radio frequency
exposure limits for Australia and New Zealand. Electromagnetics
Forum: The original 4 issue magazine on the subject of
health effects from Electromagnetic Radiation. Since superceded by
this web site. Links to Other Websites
A list of other websites worth looking at.
Subscribe
to the EMFacts EMF/OH&S Information Group to receive regular
emails on Occupational Health and Safety issues related to exposure
to Electromagnetic Fields. Visit our Yahoo
Group for further information or to subscribe.
EMFacts
Consultancy: Email:
Cellular and cordless telephones, risk for brain tumours: 27 Jun, 01 Historical Evidence of ... Childhood Leukemia Peak with The Advent of Electricity ...... Sam Milham (PhD) and E.M. Ossiander (PhD): 3 Jun, 01 Human Spermatogenesis: 24 Apr, 01 German Study says RF/MW may contribute to uveal melanoma: 30 Jan, 01 Swiss Cell Phone Experiment: 19 Oct, 00 EMF/EMR Reduces Melatonin: 2 Sep, 00 Cancer Connection to Mobile Phones: 25 May, 00 Bruce Hocking's TV antenna/childhood leukemia study: 15 May, 00 Non Thermal MW Affects Gene Expression: 27 Apr, 00 A Real SAD Chapter, EMF/Tamoxifen: 24 Apr, 00 Dr. Cherry and the Vienna Workshop, Oct - 1998: 16 Apr, 00 Dr. Adey's ODC Experiments, Interrupted by Motorola: 18 Feb, 00 Dr. Henry Lai's Vienna Report on RFR Bioeffects: 16 Nov, 99 Liburdy on Melatonin (in 1998): 14 Nov, 99 Lund U. Study on Blood-Brain-Barrier 26 Oct, 99 Science and the Blue World: 18 Oct, 99 Toronto Study-- Child Leukemia Connection (part 1): 16 Oct, 99 Toronto Study-- Child Leukemia Connection (part 2): 16 Oct, 99
References for Article at left: [ 1 ] K H Mild, et al,
Comparison of analogue and digital mobile phone users and symptoms ~
A Swedish-Norwegian study National Institute for Working Life, UmeÂ,
Sweden. 14.5.1998
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