Pages

Wednesday, 8 June 2011

Mobile Phones Linked To Brain Tumors After Long-term Use

the largest UK research the safety of mobile phones has not excluded the possibility of long-term risk of cancer, and found that parents should continue to limit the use of mobile phones for children aged seven and prevent young children.


Mobile Telecommunications and Health Research (MTHR) was launched in 2001 and financed the British government. The study found no evidence of risk of short-term exposure among adults, but "very little hint" of increased risk among those who had used the phones for more than 10 years. The information was "borderline statistical significance" means that more research is needed.

The reason the data can be convinced that the study included very few of these long-term users.

"We can not exclude the possibility that at this stage of the disease may appear after a few years," said President Lawrence Challis study. "There's no way you can do as well as epidemiological evidence we have is not strong enough to exclude, and because most cancers can not be detected up to 10 years what causes them. Smoking had no connection any of lung cancer after 10 years. "

Some critics have accused the mobile studio selective use of data for mobile phones seem safer.

"Normal use a cell phone for a few minutes does not cause adverse health effects, but what about the call of 20 minutes?" said Roger Coghill of Coghill Research Laboratories, which specializes in studying the health effects of radiation. "There are many gaps in this report, at least not an important work on children and there are biological reasons why we should have concerns about children and the elderly."

No comments:

Post a Comment