Tuesday 19 December 2017

Cell phones aren’t a public health risk



Dangerous, but not because it's going to give you a brain tumor.
cell phone
The California Department of Public Health recently released guidelines for decreasing one's exposure to cell phone radiation. This seems, at first, like a reasonable thing to offer. But the problem with a government body issuing guidelines on how to avoid something is that it implies the thing should be avoided. And there’s no evidence that cell phones are dangerous to your health.
Period.
Why would the CDPH want to warn against cell phone radiation if it’s not hazardous? According to CDPH Director Karen Smith, “there are concerns among some public health professionals and members of the public regarding long-term, high use exposure to the energy emitted by cellphones.” That press release goes on to say that some public health official thinks the radio waves emitted “may impact human health,” while also stating that “the scientific community has not reached a consensus on the risks of cell phone use.” source
We requested that the CDPH send us the information they used to make this decision, and received a lengthy list of links to other government agencies’ positions on the matter. Nearly all of these other agencies have summarized the evidence as showing that cell phones have not been shown to pose a health risk, but that we need to do more long-term studies. It seems that the CDPH has simply drawn a more precautionary conclusion than most of the other agencies based on exactly the same data.
It may be true that certain public health officials think cell phones pose a risk to human health, but it’s misleading to say that there’s no scientific consensus on the subject. There is. The scientific consensus is that cell phones are safe, but that we should still do more research.
This isn’t the first time that California has played it overly safe, to say the least. They also recently decided that glyphosate, or Round-Up, required a label marking it as a possible carcinogen—even though most national and international health organizations agree that glyphosate is safe to use.
There’s no harm in trying to avoid things that might pose risks. You should live your life the way you see fit. But when a public health department releases guidelines that make it seem as if something might be a serious health hazard, they owe it to the public to make the real risks clear.

Let’s take a look at what the data actually has to say.

It’s hard to study cell phone health effects

The trouble here is that many of the studies on cell phone radiation are poorly designed. With a new drug, you can study potential adverse effects by assigning some people to get a placebo pill and some to get the real medicine, then following them to see what happens to each group. You can’t do that with a phone. The logistics of fooling someone into thinking they’re using a real phone would be a nightmare, plus you’d be hard-pressed to find enough adults in the developed world who don’t already use cell phones to form a good study set. Maybe you could go to a developing area that isn’t already inundated, but you’d have to set up infrastructure to allow some subjects to use the phones once they get them. And that would of course present an ethical problem, because you’d be introducing a potential cancer risk to a group that had previously been free of it.
That leaves us with observational and case-control studies, where researchers compare people who use phones a lot with those who don’t. These types of studies are better than nothing, but they’re also deeply flawed. There are likely lots of differences between the kind of person who owns a cell phone and the person who doesn’t, especially given how widespread phone use is today. These differences may influence health risks and make it seem as if the phones themselves are causing health problems, when really it’s some other confounding factor.
All this adds up to a lot of wishy-washy results that don’t really mean anything. It’s not until you look at the few large studies done in the past decade that you can find any solid evidence. And when you do, the message is clear: cell phones don’t pose a health hazard.




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