|
|
|
Cellphones don't hike cancer risk: Danish study
Reported October 21, 2011
Cellphones do not increase the risk of cancer, according
to a large study involving more than 350,000 people by Danish researchers
published Friday.
The results, released on the British Medical Journal's website, chime with a
series of other studies that have reached similar conclusions.
Scientists from the Institute of Cancer Epidemiology in Copenhagen looked at
people aged at least 30 who subscribed to cellphone contracts and compared
their rates of brain tumours with non-subscribers between 1990 and 2007.
Outside experts said the large scale of the trial was impressive.
"This paper supports most other reports which do not find any detrimental
effects of phone use under normal exposures," said Malcolm Sperrin, director
of Medical Physics at Britain's Royal Berkshire Hospital and Fellow of the
Institute of Physics and Engineering in Medicine.
At the end of May, the World Health Organization's International Agency for
Research on Cancer decided cellphone use should be classified as "possibly
carcinogenic to humans," putting then in the same category as lead,
chloroform and coffee.
But just over a month later the International Commission on Non-Ionizing
Radiation Protection's committee on epidemiology said the scientific
evidence increasingly pointed away from a link between cellphone use and
brain tumours.
The number of cellphones has risen hugely since the early 1980s, with nearly
5 billion handsets in use today, prompting lengthy debate about their
potential link to the main types of brain tumour, glioma and meningioma.
Source: http://www.edmontonjournal.com/health/index.html |
|
|