Scores of Scientists Raise Alarm about the Long-Term Health Effects of Cellphones
Children
in particular may be vulnerable.
By
Josh Harkinson
PathDoc/Shutterstock
Are government officials doing
enough to protect us from the potential long-term health effects of wearable
devices and cellphones? Maybe not. A letter released on Monday May 11, 2015
signed by more than 190 scientists from 38 countries, calls on the United
Nations, the World Health Organization (WHO), and national governments to
develop stricter controls on these and other products that create
electromagnetic fields (EMF).
"Based on peer-reviewed,
published research, we have serious concerns regarding the ubiquitous and
increasing exposure to EMF generated by electric and wireless devices," reads the letter,
whose signatories have collectively published more than 2,000 peer-reviewed
papers on the subject. "The various agencies setting safety standards have
failed to impose sufficient guidelines to protect the general public,
particularly children who are more vulnerable to the effects of EMF."
For decades, some scientists have
questioned the safety of EMF, but their concerns take on a heightened
significance in the age of ubiquitous wifi routers, the Internet of Things, and the advent of wearable technologies like the Apple
Watch and Fit bit
devices, which remain in close contact with the body for extended periods.
"This is very much like
studying tobacco back in the 1950s…The industry has co-opted many
researchers."
Cellphones, among the most studied
emitters of electromagnetic radiation, remain the standard for judging health
risks. The federal Centers for Disease Control and Prevention maintains
that "we do not have the science to link health problems to cell phone
use." In a 2012 review of all available research, Timothy Moynihan, a
doctor with the respected Mayo Clinic, concluded that "there's no consensus about the degree of cancer
risk—if any—posed by cell phone use."
The WHO, on the other hand,
classifies radio-frequency electromagnetic radiation (the type emitted by wifi
routers and cellphones) as "possibly carcinogenic to humans" based on
limited evidence associating cellphone use with an increased risk for glioma, a
malignant type of brain cancer. "The conclusion means that there could be
some risk," Dr. Jonathan Samet, a medical professor at the University of
Southern California and chair of the WHO panel that made the determination, explained in 2011, "and therefore we need to keep a close watch for a
link between cell phones and cancer."
Studies since then have highlighted
the need for caution. Last year, French researchers found
an almost three-fold increase in the incidence of brain cancer in people with
more than 900 hours of lifetime cellphone use. Then, in March, Swedish
researchers reported that the risk of being diagnosed with brain cancer
increased by a factor of three in people who'd used cell or cordless phones for
at least 25 years. Research on lab animals has caused similar concerns.
Respected medical groups are
starting to pay attention. In 2013, the American Academy of Pediatrics urged
the Federal Communications Commission, which regulates radiation levels in
communication devices, to adopt cellphone standards that are more protective
for children, and to better disclose products' EMF levels to consumers. In
December, the California Medical Association urged regulators to "re-evaluate microwave radiation exposure levels
associated with wireless communication devices."
"We are really all part of a
large biological experiment without our informed consent."
Most of the researchers who signed
today's appeal letter believe that there's now enough evidence to classify
radio-frequency EMF as "probably carcinogenic" or even just plain
"carcinogenic," says Joel Moskowitz, director of the Center for
Family and Community Health at the University of California-Berkeley, who
played a central role in gathering the signatures. "All of them are
clearly calling for the need for caution."
Reports about a lack of scientific
consensus on the health effects of cellphones, which have appeared in Slate, Wired, the Verge, and elsewhere are somewhat misleading, Moskowitz contends.
In a 2009 review for the Journal of Clinical Oncology, he parsed
cellphone studies based on the funding source and quality of the science. He
found that low-quality and industry-funded studies tended not to associate
cellphone use with a heightened risk of tumors, while high-quality and
foundation- or public-funded studies usually found the opposite result.
"This is very much like studying tobacco back in the 1950s," he says.
"The industry has co-opted many researchers."
In 2011, Moskowitz consulted for the
San Francisco Board of Supervisors after it voted to pass the nation's first
right-to-know cellphone ordinance. The law would have forced retailers to warn
consumers about potentially dangerous radiation levels emitted by cell phones,
but the supervisors agreed to effectively nix the law to settle a court
challenge by the Cellular Telecommunications Industry Association; the
industry's lead trade group argued that the law violated its free speech
rights. (The CTIA did not return a call from Mother Jones requesting
comment on today's appeal letter and the health effects of cellphones.)
On Tuesday, the Berkeley City
Council will vote on a right-to-know law that was carefully worded to thwart
legal challenges. Harvard Law School Professor Lawrence Lessig, who helped
craft the law, has volunteered to defend it in court pro bono. "We are
really all part of a large biological experiment without our informed
consent," says Columbia University EMF expert Martin Blank in a video released to coincide with today's
letter. "To protect ourselves, our children, and our ecosystem, we must
reduce exposure by establishing more protective guidelines."
This article was sent to Pearl News
Service by Mother Jones- Editor
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