UPDATE: For the first time, the possible link between mobile phones and cancer has been validated by the world’s premier health organisation.
The landmark announcement on Tuesday night followed a week-long meeting of 31 scientists convened by the International Agency for Research on Cancer, the WHO’s cancer arm. The experts reviewed details from dozens of published studies, going further than the agency’s own Interphone study which concluded last year that there was no clear link between phones and cancer.
The scientists said their classification was based partly on an association between mobile phones and glioma, a particularly dangerous type of brain cancer. One study showed a 40 per cent higher risk of glioma among the heavier users, though the IARC panel did not itself quantify the overall risk.”
Now, the question has to be asked: are mobile phones the new cigarettes? Absolutely, according to author and researcher Dr Devra Davis who draws many ‘killer’ comparisons in her new book, Disconnect: The Truth About Mobile Phone Radiation, What The Industry Has Done & How To Protect Your Family.
It’s a potent comparison of two giant and mega-powerful industries, mobile phones and tobacco. There are two types of mobile phone users (it’s a rare bird who doesn’t have a mobile in 2011): those who think the radiation/cancer/brain tumour link to mobile phones is malarky and those who take it very seriously indeed.
The Mamamia office is fairly typical of the split. Mia is in the ‘taking it seriously’ camp. The rest of us use our mobiles incessantly and without fear. Some experts, including Dr Davis and Australia’s leading brain surgeon Dr Charlie Teo, fear that the potential future health consequences of our heavy mobile phone usage are enormous. Because unlike with tobacco, when only a small percentage of the population were ever heavy ‘users’, there are now 21 million mobile phones in use in Australia, that’s more than one per person!
Top Comments
This all seems at odds with this very detailed recent article in the NYT
http://www.nytimes.com/2011...
My brother has a brain tumor (benign) - he is 16 years old and has had it since he was 5. Initially it caused developmental delays, but he seems to have mostly caught up and is doing well. However, my brother's treatment team told us that it was important that we modified phone usage - and now I'm quite obsessive about it. I always try and keep my phone in my handbag (towards the outside - furthest away from me), I use headphones or loudspeaker to talk and I keep my phone away from my bed when I sleep. I think we don't know enough to NOT take action and until someone proves to me that mobile phones absolutely, definitely have no link to brain tumors, I'm not taking the risk.