Bangkok Post

GOOD CALL Mobile phones are still safe for humans, researcher­s say

- DENISE GRADY NYT © 2018 NEW YORK TIMES NEWS SERVICE

Do mobile phones cause cancer? Despite years of research, there is still no clear answer. But two US government studies released last week, one in rats and one in mice, suggest that if there is any risk, it is small, health officials said.

Safety questions about phones have drawn intense interest and debate for years as the devices have become integral to most people’s lives. Even a minute risk could harm millions of people.

These two studies on the effects of the type of radiation the phones emit, conducted over 10 years and costing US$25 million (791 million baht), are considered the most extensive to date.

In male rats, the studies linked tumours in the heart to high exposure to radiation from the phones. But that problem did not occur in female rats, or any mice.

The rodents in the studies were exposed to radiation nine hours a day for two years, more than people experience even with a lot of phone use, so the results cannot be applied directly to humans, said John Bucher, a senior scientist at the National Toxicology Program, during a telephone news briefing.

The results, he said, had not led him to change his own phone use or to urge his own family to do so. But he also noted that the heart tumours in rats — called malignant schwannoma­s — are similar to acoustic neuromas, a benign tumour in people involving the nerve that connects the ear to the brain, which some studies have linked to phone use.

He said that nearly 20 animals studies on this subject have been done, “with the vast majority coming up negative with respect to cancer”.

Other agencies are studying mobile phone use in people and trying to determine whether it is linked to the incidence of any type of cancer, Bucher said.

The US Food and Drug Administra­tion issued a statement saying it respected the research by the toxicology programme, had reviewed many other studies on cellphone safety, and had “not found sufficient evidence that there are adverse health effects in humans caused by exposures at or under the current radio-frequency exposure limits”.

The statement, from Dr Jeffrey Shuren, director of the FDA’s centre for devices and radiologic­al health, also said: “Even with frequent daily use by the vast majority of adults, we have not seen an increase in events like brain tumours.”

For people who worry about the risk, health officials offer common-sense advice: Spend less time on phones, use a headset or speaker mode so that the phone is not pressed up against the head and avoid trying to make calls if the signal is weak. Bucher noted that the radiation emitted increases when users are in spots where the signal is poor or sporadic and the phone has to work harder to connect.

In December, California issued advice to consumers about how to lower their exposure, including texting instead of talking, keeping the phone away from the head and body while streaming, downloadin­g or sending large files; carrying the phone in a backpack, briefcase or purse, not a pocket, bra or belt holster; and not sleeping with the phone close to your head.

The two studies, involving 3,000 animals, are “the most comprehens­ive assessment­s of health effects and exposure to radio-frequency radiation in rats and mice to date”, according to a statement from the toxicology programme, part of the US National Institute of Environmen­tal Health Sciences. The studies extend partial findings released in May 2016, which found small increases in the incidence of tumours in the brains and hearts of male rats, but not female ones.

The new studies also found tumours in the brains and some other organs in the animals exposed to the radio-frequency radiation. But Bucher said those findings were “equivocal”, emphasisin­g that only the heart tumours provided evidence strong enough for the researcher­s to trust. Other possible effects need more research, he said.

Others felt that even the ambiguous findings were of concern. Joel M. Moskowitz, director of the Center for Family and Community Health at the School of Public Health, at the University of California, Berkeley, said that based on the overall results of the study, the government should reassess and strengthen the limits it imposes on how much and what types of radiation mobile phones can emit.

Scientists do not know why only male rats and not females develop the heart tumours, but Bucher said one possibilit­y is simply that the males are bigger and absorb more of the radiation.

The studies also found some DNA damage in the exposed animals, a bit of a surprise because scientists had believed that radio-frequency radiation — unlike the ionising radiation in X-rays — could not harm DNA.

“We don’t feel like we understand enough about the results to be able to place a huge degree of confidence in the findings,” Bucher said.

A seemingly paradoxica­l finding that has also puzzled the researcher­s is that the rats exposed to the mobile phone radiation actually lived longer than the controls. One possible explanatio­n, Bucher said, is that the radiation may ease inflammati­on, and lessen the severity of a chronic kidney disorder that is common in ageing rats and can kill them.

Asked if there was any chance that mobile phone use could help people live longer, Bucher said: “The extrapolat­ion to humans requires a number of steps that go beyond the realm of what we’re studying here. I don’t think that question is particular­ly answerable at the moment.”

We have not seen an increase in events like brain tumours

 ??  ?? Commuters use their phones while waiting for the MRT in Bangkok.
Commuters use their phones while waiting for the MRT in Bangkok.

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