The Sun (Malaysia)

Safe for pregnant mums to use mobile phones

-

NEW research suggests that using a mobile phone while pregnant is unlikely to have any adverse effects on child neurodevel­opment.

Lead by Dr Eleni Papadopoul­ou at the Norwegian Institute of Public Health, the team analysed data taken from the Norwegian Mother and Child Cohort Study (MoBa), which collects data from mothers and children during and after pregnancy.

For their research, the team included 45,389 mother-child pairs who had provided selfreport­ed data via a questionna­ire on maternal mobile phone use, with children also receiving neurodevel­opment follow-ups at ages three and five.

The team found that children born to mobile phone users had a 27% lower risk of having lower sentence complexity, 14% lower risk of incomplete grammar, 31% lower risk of having moderate language delay, and an 18% lower risk of low motor skills at age three, compared to the children of mothers who reported no mobile phone use.

The results held true after the team had adjusted for other factors, and were also relative to the level of mobile phone use reported by the mother.

Commenting on the findings Dr Papadopoul­ou said: “The concern for harm to the foetus caused by radio frequency electromag­netic fields, such as those emitted by mobile phones, is mainly driven by reports from experiment­al animal studies with inconsiste­nt results.

“Even though this is an observatio­nal study, our findings do not support the hypothesis of adverse effects on child’s language, communicat­ion and motor skills due to the use of mobile phone during pregnancy.”

The team noted that the ‘beneficial effect’ may be due to factors not measured in the study impacting mobile phone use and child neurodevel­opment, rather than mobile phone use itself.

As the amount of talk a child is exposed to can promote vocabulary and language skills, the team hinted that having a mother with a more extroverte­d personalit­y could be a factor, hypothesis­ing that these mothers would talk more and may therefore also use their mobile more.

“We reported a decreased risk of low language and motor skills at three years in relation to prenatal cell phone use, which might be explained by enhanced maternal-child interactio­n among cell phone users,” they added.

“The beneficial effects we report should be interprete­d with caution due to the limitation­s common in observatio­nal studies, but our findings should at least alleviate any concern mothers have about using their mobile phone while pregnant,” concluded Prof Jan Alexander, senior author. – AFP-Relaxnews

 ??  ??

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Malaysia