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Research into the link between regular handset use and
disease reveals the risks rise significantly after 10 years, despite official
assurances that they are safe.....
Geoffrey Lean reports
2 July 2008
The Independent: 07 October 2007
Using a mobile phone for more than 10 years increases the
risk of getting brain cancer, according to the most comprehensive study of the
risks yet published.
The study – which contradicts official pronouncements that
there is no danger of getting the disease – found that people who have had the
phones for a decade or more are twice as likely to get a malignant tumour on
the side of the brain where they hold the handset.
The scientists who conducted the research say using a
mobile for just an hour every working day during that period is enough to
increase the risk – and that the international standard used to protect users
from the radiation emitted is "not safe" and "needs to be
revised".
They conclude that "caution is needed in the use of mobile
phones" and believe children, who are especially vulnerable, should be
discouraged from using them at all.
The study, published in the latest issue of the
peer-reviewed journal Occupational Environmental Medicine, is important because
it pulls together research on people who have used the phones for long enough
to contract the disease.
Cancers take at least 10 years – and normally much longer –
to develop but, as mobile phones have spread so recently and rapidly,
relatively few people have been using them that long.
Official assurances that the phones are safe have been
based on research that has, at best, included only a few people who have been
exposed to the radiation for long enough to get the disease, and are therefore
of little or no value in assessing the real risk.
Last month, Britain's
largest investigation into the health risks of the technology, the £8.8m Mobile
Telecommunications and Health Research (MTHR) programme – funded by
"government and industry sources" – reported that "mobile phones
have not been found to be associated with any biological or adverse health
effects".
But its chairman, Professor Lawrie Challis, admitted that
only a small proportion of the research had covered people who had used the
phones for more than a decade. He warned: "We cannot rule out the
possibility at this stage that cancer could appear in a few years' time."
He said the investigation had discovered "a very
slight hint" of increased numbers of brain tumours among those exposed for
more than 10 years, and called for more research.
The new study – headed by two Swedes, Professor Lennart
Hardell of the University Hospital in Orebro
and Professor Kjell Hansson Mild of Umea University, who also serves on the
MTHR programme's management committee – goes some way to meeting the
deficiency.
The scientists pulled together the results of the 11
studies that have so far investigated the occurrence of tumours in people who
have used phones for more than a decade, drawing on research in Sweden, Denmark
Finland, Japan, Germany, the United States and Britain. They found almost all
had discovered an increased risk, especially on the side of the head where
people listened to their handsets.
Five of the six studies of malignant gliomas, cancers of
the glial cells that support and protect the nerve cells, found an increased
risk. The only one that did not still found an increase in benign gliomas. Four
of the five studies that looked at acoustic neuromas – benign but often
disabling tumours on the auditory nerve, which usually cause deafness – found
them. The exception was based on only two cases of the disease, but still found
that long-term users had larger tumours than other people.
The scientists assembled the findings of all the studies to
analyse them collectively. This revealed that people who have used their phones
for a decade or more are 20 per cent more likely to contract acoustic neuromas,
and 30 per cent more likely to get malignant gliomas.
The risk is even greater on the side of the head the
handset is used: long-term users were twice as likely to get the gliomas, and
two and a half times more likely to get the acoustic neuromas there than other
people.
The scientists conclude: "Results from present studies
on use of mobile phones for more than 10 years give a consistent pattern of an
increased risk for acoustic neuroma and glioma." They add that "an
increased risk for other types of brain tumours cannot be ruled out".
Professors Hardell and Mild have also themselves carried
out some of the most extensive original work into tumours among long-term
mobile phone users and have come up with even more alarming results. Their
research suggests they are more than three times more likely to get malignant
gliomas than other people, and nearly five times more likely to get them on the
side of the head where they held the phone. For acoustic neuromas they found a
threefold and three-and-a-half-fold increased risk respectively.
They have also carried out the only study into the effects
of the long-term use of cordless phones, and found this also increased both
kinds of tumours. Their research suggests that using a mobile or cordless phone
for just 2,000 hours – less than an hour every working day for 10 years – is
enough to augment the risk.
Professor Mild told The Independent on Sunday: "I find
it quite strange to see so many official presentations saying that there is no
risk. There are strong indications that something happens after 10 years."
He stressed that brain cancers are rare: they account for less than 2 per cent of
primary tumours in Britain,
though they are disproportionately deadly, causing 7 per cent of the years of
life lost to the disease. "Every cancer is one too many," he said.
He said he uses a mobile phone as little as possible, and
urges others to use hands-free equipment and make only short calls, reserving
longer ones for landlines. He also said that mobiles should not be given to
children, whose thinner skulls and developing nervous systems make them
particularly vulnerable.
The danger may be even greater than the new study suggests
for, as Professor Mild says, 10 years is the "minimum" period needed
by cancers to develop. As they normally take much longer, very many more would
be likely to strike long-term users after 15, 20 or 30 years – which leads some
to fear that an epidemic of the disease could develop in the coming decades,
particularly among today's young people.
On the other hand, the professor points out that the amount
of radiation emitted by phones has decreased greatly since the first ones came
on the market more than a decade ago, which suggests that exposures and risks
should also be falling. But he still recommended choosing phones that give out
as little radiation as possible (see below), and pointed out that people are
now also exposed to many other sources of radiation, such as masts and Wi-Fi
systems, though these emit much less than mobile handsets.
Britain's official Health Protection Agency – which has
taken a cautious view of claims that radiation from mobile phones, their masts
and Wi-Fi installations can damage health – admits that the study "may be
indicative" of a risk, but says that "such analyses cannot be
conclusive".
The Mobile Operators Association said: "This is not
new data for the World Health Organisation and the many independent expert
scientific committees who state that there are no established health risks from
using mobile phones that comply with international guidelines."
Both sides agree that there is need for more research.
Professor Mild said a possible link between mobile phones and Alzheimer's
disease should also be examined, since "we have indications that it might
be a problem" as well as a possible link with Parkinson's disease,
"which can't be ruled out".
In the meantime, the scientists want a revision of the
emission standard for mobiles and other sources of radiation, which they
describe as "inappropriate" and "not safe". The
international standard is designed merely to prevent harmful heating of living
tissue or induced electrical currents in the body – and does not take the risk
of getting cancer into account.
Professors Hansen and Mild serve on the international
BioInitiative Working Group of leading scientists and public health experts,
which this summer produced a report warning that the standard was
"thousands of times too lenient".
The BioInitiative report added: "It has been
established beyond reasonable doubt that some adverse health effects occur at
far lower levels of exposure... some at several thousand times below the
existing safety limits." It also warned that unless this is corrected
there could be "public health problems of a global nature".
Case study: 'Mobiles are the smoking of the 21st
century; they need health warnings'
Neil Whitfield, a 49-year-old father of six, developed an
acoustic neuroma in 2001 after years of heavy mobile phone use, on the left
side of the head, to which he had held his handset. He says he had no family
history of the disease and that when he asked a specialist what had caused it,
the doctor had asked him if he used a mobile.
"I was on it four hours a day, easily" he says.
"When I held it to my head, I could feel my ear getting warm."
He adds that he completely lost his hearing in his left ear
and was off work for 12 months. Unable to go back to his old job in marketing,
he became a teacher, suffering a £20,000 drop in income.
"It has had a devastating effect on my family,"
he says. "Mobile phones are the smoking of the 21st century; they should
have health warnings on them. You would never buy a child a pack of cigarettes,
but we give them mobiles which could cause them harm."
Warning: your model might be dangerous
Exposure to radiation, shown as Specific Absorption Rate
(SAR) levels, varies widely in different models. Manufacturers and the
Government have ignored the Stewart report that urges they be clearly marked on
phones and boxes. They are thus hard to find, though the Carphone Warehouse
catalogue includes them. An easily accessible list of phones and radiation
exposures is published in Germany,
where low-radiation models, defined as having SAR of 0.6 or under, are
encouraged.
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