Thursday, October 3, 2013

Million Women Study: Shoddy Science Does Not Warrant Shoddy Conclusions


Dr. Leszczynski is one of the world's leading biologists who researches the effects of radiofrequency radiation for the Finnish government. At least he did until the Finnish government defunded his laboratory.  He was one of 31 experts invited in 2011 by the World Health Organization's (WHO) International Agency for Research on Cancer to review the cancer risks of exposure to wireless radiation. The results of this expert review was that WHO classified radiofrequency energy, especially cell phone radiation, as "possibly carcinogenic" in humans (i.e., Group 2B). Dr. Leszczynski has subsequently reported that some of the group wanted a "probably carcinogenic" or Group 2A classification.

Dr. Leszczynski has been writing an occasional column that is published on the Washington Times web site.  For his latest article, he asked six experts including two of the WHO Interphone Study investigators to comment on the United Kingdom's Million Women Study.  His interest in this study is because the study's authors interpreted the absence of evidence for increased brain cancer risk to mean that cell phone radiation does not cause cancer.

One of the experts interviewed for this column was the former director of the WHO's EMF Project. He defends the Million Women Study and argues based on the results that cell phone radiation does not cause cancer.  In contrast, the other five experts including myself criticize the study and dismiss its relevance to the cancer debate.

Despite its shortcomings, the study found significant evidence that cell phone use was associated with increased risk of acoustic neuroma, a rare, non-malignant tumor on the nerve from the ear to the brain.


The Million Women Study … shoddy design … shoddy results … shoddy conclusions

Dariusz Leszczynski, Washington Times Communities, Oct 3, 2013

HELSINKI, Finland, October 3, 2013 —The only two epidemiological cohort studies in existence examining the link between cell phone radiation exposures and brain cancer have embarrassingly poor design.

The two cohorts were established in Denmark and in UK. The original purpose was not to study cell phone radiation effects but other health problems. At some point in designing cohorts, scientists decided to ask questions about cell phone use and, as an aside, to examine brain cancer risk.

The problem is that the questions concerning cell phone use were not well thought out. It seems that epidemiologists did not care at all about details of exposure to cell phone radiation. They just wanted to know it - “roughly”.

In the first cohort, called ‘Danish Cohort’, the information on exposure of persons to cell phone radiation is completely useless for the purpose of determining whether causality exists between radiation exposure and cancer (for details see letters to the British Medical Journal and The Scientist Magazine story).

In the spring of 2013, the results from the second cohort were published  and called The Million Women Study. As seen from the description of the study, its primary goal was to examine the effects of hormone replacement therapy in women over 50 years of age.

This, by design, indicates that the results of this study apply only to a certain sex (females) and age (over 50) group and can not be freely extrapolated to the cell phone users as a whole. Furthermore, period of the exposure to cell phone radiation examined in The Million Women Study is far too short to be relevant when examining causality link between cell phone radiation and cancer.

The information about cell phone radiation exposures obtained for the study was as follows (quote from the study): “Women in the study have been asked twice about mobile phone use. In a survey conducted between 1999 and 2005 (to which about 65% of women recruited in 1996–2001 replied [sic!]), women were asked: ‘About how often do you use a mobile phone?’, and given three options to respond: ‘never’, ‘less than once a day’, ‘every day’; and ‘For how long have you used one?’ (participants were asked to provide total years of use).”

The authors did not obtain information about cell phone usage per day or week. Cell phone users talking on the phone for few minutes or for few hours per week were analyzed together. When considering the latency of brain cancer, the follow-up period was far too short to provide relevant and reliable information. This extremely limited information about the exposures to cell phone radiation is absolutely inadequate to determine whether exposures have, or have not, causal link with cancer.

The inadequacy of the collected the information on the exposure is very disturbing. It is like scientists evaluating the health risk in smokers and not asking how many cigarettes per day someone smokes.

The Million Women Study has shoddy exposure design leading to shoddy results and ending with shoddy conclusions.

The Million Women Study is, similarly with the Danish Cohort, yet another example of the complete failure of epidemiologists to design scientifically relevant study on cell phone radiation and brain cancer.

It is embarrassing to hear that some scientists consider the “epidemiological failure”, called The Million Women Study, as a “well designed” research.

Forbes’ Magazine blogger, Geoffrey Kabat of the Albert Einstein College of Medicine in New York City, in his recent post says about The Million Women Study: “The strengths of this design are two-fold.  First, it follows the actual temporal sequence, with exposure preceding disease.  Second, since information on exposure is obtained before the onset of illness, this information cannot be biased (distorted) by the presence of illness.”

Indeed, these could be the strengths of the study if the information on exposures was relevant.

Mr. Kabat writes also that: “Because of its large size and prospective design, the Million Women Study results represent an important contribution.”

Big is not always beautiful, especially when one side of the examined equation, the radiation exposure data, are shoddy.

I asked also opinions from the few prominent scientists about The Million Women Study. Here are their opinions, directly as provided via e-mails:

Michael Repacholi, retired Head of the WHO EMF Project, agrees with Geoffrey Kabat that the Million Women Study is a valuable proof of no cancer risk:

“This is a very large, well-conducted cohort study showing no increased incidence of glioma or meningioma with mobile phone use of 10 or more years. However, the study reported a trend of increasing risk of acoustic neuroma. When the results were combined with the Danish cohort study, that had a much larger number of these tumours, no statistical increase was found with mobile phone use of 10 or more years. Aside from the obvious difficulties in accurately assessing people’s exposure to mobile phones, the evidence from well-conducted epidemiological and animal studies is now establishing that mobile phone use does not cause or increase the incidence of head or neck cancers.”

The above opinion of Michael Repacholi should be also viewed in the context of his recent criticism of epidemiology. His opinion was that epidemiology is unable to provide reliable information on causality link between cell phone radiation and brain cancer. As Mr. Repacholi said in his Guest Blog on BRHP: “my concern is that there is an over-reliance on epidemiology studies.”

However, epidemiologists were cautious and did not consider the evidence provided by The Million Women Study to be as great as Kabat and Repacholi thought.

Michael Kundi of the Medical University of Vienna, Austria, considers it a very good idea to use the existing large cohorts to study cell phone radiation and cancer issue. However, he points out that the authors of the Million Women Study did not do a good job:

“It is definitely worthwhile to try and use a large cohort of people that are available for investigations like the cohort of the Million Women Study. This cohort has been used for many important health issues and will continue to be used for a variety of research questions. Having said this, I regret to say that the authors have not put much thought into the issue of mobile phone use and brain tumors. It is almost impossible to study induction of brain tumors because of the short observation period. That is, most if not all of the tumors diagnosed during the follow-up must have already existed at the time of commencing use of a mobile. This leaves us with studying effects on tumor growth rate and/or progression. In the case of glioma the peculiarities of the relationship of incidences with age have to be considered. In this cohort there are only women and they are in a narrow age range of about 60 years. The consequence of this fact is that if mobile phone use leads to an increased growth rate of the tumor and therefore an earlier diagnosis the risk estimate must be low or even less than one (because at older age the incidence is declining). The situation for acoustic neuroma is different because the age-incidence function differs from that of glioma.”

Bruce Armstrong of the Sydney University, Australia, considers that The Million Women Study is insufficient to think of down-grading the IARC classification of cell phone radiation from the current possible carcinogen category to lower one:

“A total of 1,261 primary intracranial neoplasms were diagnosed during follow-up, which is sufficient to make a potentially worthwhile contribution to literature on mobile phone use and brain tumours. Some 50,000 invasive neoplasms at other sites were also diagnosed, which can also contribute to knowledge about the relationship between other cancers and mobile phone use. Of the intracranial tumours investigated (glioma, meningioma, pituitary tumours and acoustic neuroma) only risk of acoustic neuroma was increased in women who were longer term users of a mobile phone. This result is coherent with results from the most recent case-control studies of mobile phone use and acoustic neuroma but not with the absence of increase in risk of acoustic neuroma reported from the Danish cohort study of mobile phone subscribers.  While this study adds to the evidence on the relationship between mobile phone use and intracranial tumours, it does not add sufficiently, in my opinion, to shift in either direction the IARC’s conclusion that there is limited evidence in humans for carcinogenicity of radiofrequency radiation.”

Joel Moskowitz of the University of California at Berkeley has also serious doubts about the design and quality of the outcome of The Million Women Study:

“With regard to investigating the association between cell phone use and subsequent tumor risk (which was not the primary purpose of the “million women” study), this study had several major shortcomings which would undermine its ability to find this association.  First, cell phone use was measured only at the beginning of the study, and it was assessed too crudely to expect to find an association with tumor risk. When women enrolled in the study, they were asked how many years they used a cell phone, and if they did, whether they used it daily or less than daily. The researchers had no follow up assessments to determine whether the women continued to use their cell phones over time so they had to assume that cell phone users continued to use their cell phones. More importantly, the researchers could not assess how much time the women spent on a cell phone either before or during the course of the study so women who used a few minutes almost every day at baseline would be lumped together with women who used their phone a half hour or more per day.  Second, the study failed to assess cordless phone use which likely exceeded cell phone use among these women due to the high cost of cell phone minutes during this period.  Cordless phone use has been found in other research to increase brain tumor risk. Third, brain tumors can take several decades to develop and few women in this study had used their cell phones for ten or more years.  Fourth, about 40% of the 1.3 million women who participated in the study were excluded from the cell phone analyses—most because they failed to provide any cell phone information. This large loss of research participants limits how generalizable the study findings are and could have biased the results. Despite these major shortcomings, the study reported a statistically significant doubling of risk of acoustic neuroma, a tumor on the nerve from the ear to the brain, among those who used cell phones for 10 or more years. Moreover, this association was related to the number of years of cell phone use.”

Mark Elwood, of the University of Auckland in New Zealand is not convinced that the provided evidence is sufficiently reliable to convince the scientists and the general public alike:

“These scientists took the opportunity of asking a few questions about cell phone use in the huge British ‘Million Women’ study, where women attending breast cancer screening clinics were invited. Over the next 10 or more years, women (average age 59) who reported the most use of cellphones had the same risk of developing brain cancers than women who did not use cellphones  at the time that was asked (and also, the same risk of all cancers, and of 18 major types of cancer). So, another of many studies showing no risk from using cellphones, but like all other studies, it can’t prove that there’s no risk. In the many analyses, there was an increased risk of one rather rare tumor, based on only 8 cases; but that was acoustic neuroma, a tumor of the nerve to the ear, and therefore in the high exposure zone from cellphones. And the study doesn’t cover men, younger people, or risks beyond about 10 years. So the debate will continue.”


Elisabeth Cardis, of CREAL-Centre for Research in Environmental Epidemiology in Spain and formerly Principal Investigator of the Interphone Project, is cautious and considers results of The Million Women Study as too weak:

“Am a bit surprised at the lack of mention of the acoustic neuroma results in the conclusion - particularly since this and glioma are the two tumour types for which their is currently the most evidence from other studies (including Interphone and the Japanese study). It seems that the first questionnaire about mobile phone use was asked over a long time period 1999-2005 but the follow-up is correctly calculated from the time the questionnaire was asked. Of the 1261 intracranial CNS tumours, 754 occurred among those who reported ever use at first questionnaire.

Only 90 of these, however, were among women who reported using the phone every day and 100 among those who reported 10+ years of use. Numbers get even smaller when the first 3 years of follow-up are excluded - 91 with 10+ years. It would be nice to see results by some form of amount of use, but obviously the information collected is very limited - ever use, daily use and number of years - but perhaps looking at categories of daily use in different periods of time since start … but the numbers would get very small.”

From the above comments of prominent epidemiologists the general conclusion can be drawn that despite the size of The Million Women cohort, the numbers of tumors are small and the information about the cell phone use is nonexistent. Therefore, it is not possible to draw any scientifically reliable conclusions based on the results of The Million Women Study.

Setting up large cohort for epidemiological study is expensive and laborious. That is why it is indeed a very good idea to use the already existing cohorts to examine causality link between cell phone radiation exposures and brain cancer.

However, the radiation exposure information, both the length and the strength/intensity of exposure, must be properly collected. Scientists working on the Danish Cohort and The Million Women Study, failed in the study design. Radiation exposure information collected in both cohorts is shoddy.

It is very disappointing that yet again epidemiologists failed. They used funds to provide us with shoddy studies. What is very worrying is the fact that these studies were published in peer-review journals and are now considered, by some, as “reliable scientific evidence”.

It is simply an embarrassing show of scientific incompetence.




Wednesday, September 25, 2013

Brain Cancer Risk & Wireless Phone Use


New research indicates that brain cancer risk increases with more years of cell phone and cordless phone use and more hours of use.

Dr. Lennart Hardell and his colleagues in Sweden just published the third in a series of papers on the use of wireless phones, including cell phones and cordless phones, and the risk of malignant and non-malignant brain tumors. The latest paper describes a new case-control study that examines the association between mobile phone use and brain cancer risk. In these studies, the cases were diagnosed with brain tumors between 2007 and 2009.  (1)

The study updates earlier research from case-control studies conducted by the Hardell group and extends the prior research by examining the effects of wireless phone use, i.e., cell phone and cordless phone use, on brain tumor risk for people who have used these phones for up to 25 or more years.

Overall, the research found that people who used wireless phones for more than a year were at 70% greater risk of brain cancer as compared to those who used wireless phones for a year or less. Those who used wireless phones for more than 25 years were at greatest risk—300% greater risk of brain cancer than those who used wireless phones for a year or less.

The total number of hours of wireless phone use was as important as the number of years of use. A fourth of the sample used wireless phones for 2,376 or more hours in their lifetime which corresponds to about 40 minutes a day over ten years. These heavier users had 250% greater risk of brain tumors as compared to those who never used wireless phones or used them for less than 39 hours in their lifetime.   

A similar analysis reported in the 13-nation Interphone study funded partly by the World Health Organization found a 182% greater risk of brain cancer among those who used cell phones for 1,640 or more hours in their lifetime.

In the current study, for all types of wireless phone use, brain cancer risk was found to be greater in the part of the brain where the exposure to wireless phone radiation was highest—in the temporal or overlapping lobes of the brain on the side of the head were people predominantly used their phones.

Given consistent results from multiple case-control studies that long-term use of mobile phones (i.e., ten or more years)  is associated with brain cancer especially near where the phone is predominantly used, the International Agency for Research on Cancer should strengthen its 2011 assessment of radiofrequency energy from “possibly carcinogenic” to “probably carcinogenic” to humans.

More importantly, governments around the world should heed the results of these studies. The public must be educated about the need to take simple precautions whenever using wireless devices. Governments must strengthen regulatory standards for wireless radiation and must fund research independent of industry to develop safer technologies.

The paper was published online in the peer-reviewed journal, International Journal of Oncology. The abstract and a link to this paper appears below along with the abstracts for the Hardell group’s two prior papers from this study.  All three papers are open access. (1-3)


References

(1) Lennart Hardell, Michael Carlberg, Fredrik Söderqvist, Kjell Hansson Mild. Case-control study of the association between malignant brain tumours diagnosed between 2007 and 2009 and mobile and cordless phone use. International Journal of Oncology. Published online September 24, 2013.

Abstract

Previous studies have shown a consistent association between long-term use of mobile and cordless phones and glioma and acoustic neuroma, but not for meningioma. When used these phones emit radiofrequency electromagnetic fields (RF-EMFs) and the brain is the main target organ for the handheld phone. The International Agency for Research on Cancer (IARC) classified in May, 2011 RF-EMF as a group 2B, i.e. a ‘possible’ human carcinogen. The aim of this study was to further explore the relationship between especially long-term (>10 years) use of wireless phones and the development of malignant brain tumours.

We conducted a new case-control study of brain tumour cases of both genders aged 18-75 years and diagnosed during 2007-2009. One population-based control matched on gender and age (within 5 years) was used to each case. Here, we report on malignant cases including all available controls. Exposures on e.g. use of mobile phones and cordless phones were assessed by a self-administered questionnaire. Unconditional logistic regression analysis was performed, adjusting for age, gender, year of diagnosis and socio-economic index using the whole control sample.

Of the cases with a malignant brain tumour, 87% (n=593) participated, and 85% (n=1,368) of controls in the whole study answered the questionnaire. The odds ratio (OR) for mobile phone use of the analogue type was 1.8, 95% confidence interval (CI)=1.04‑3.3, increasing with >25 years of latency (time since first exposure) to an OR=3.3, 95% CI=1.6-6.9. Digital 2G mobile phone use rendered an OR=1.6, 95% CI=0.996-2.7, increasing with latency >15-20 years to an OR=2.1, 95% CI=1.2-3.6. The results for cordless phone use were OR=1.7, 95% CI=1.1-2.9, and, for latency of 15-20 years, the OR=2.1, 95% CI=1.2-3.8. Few participants had used a cordless phone for >20-25 years. Digital type of wireless phones (2G and 3G mobile phones, cordless phones) gave increased risk with latency >1-5 years, then a lower risk in the following latency groups, but again increasing risk with latency >15-20 years. Ipsilateral use resulted in a higher risk than contralateral mobile and cordless phone use. Higher ORs were calculated for tumours in the temporal and overlapping lobes. Using the meningioma cases in the same study as reference entity gave somewhat higher ORs indicating that the results were unlikely to be explained by recall or observational bias.

This study confirmed previous results of an association between mobile and cordless phone use and malignant brain tumours. These findings provide support for the hypothesis that RF-EMFs play a role both in the initiation and promotion stages of carcinogenesis.

http://www.spandidos-publications.com/10.3892/ijo.2013.2111

 
(2) Lennart Hardell, Michael Carlberg, Fredrik Söderqvist, Kjell Hansson Mild. Pooled analysis of case-control studies on acoustic neuroma diagnosed 1997-2003 and 2007-2009 and use of mobile and cordless phones. International Journal of Oncology. 43(4):1036-1044. October 2013.

Abstract

We previously conducted a case-control study of acoustic neuroma. Subjects of both genders aged 20-80 years, diagnosed during 1997-2003 in parts of Sweden, were included, and the results were published. We have since made a further study for the time period 2007-2009 including both men and women aged 18-75 years selected from throughout the country. These new results for acoustic neuroma have not been published to date.

Similar methods were used for both study periods. In each, one population-based control, matched on gender and age (within five years), was identified from the Swedish Population Registry. Exposures were assessed by a self-administered questionnaire supplemented by a phone interview. Since the number of acoustic neuroma cases in the new study was low we now present pooled results from both study periods based on 316 participating cases and 3,530 controls. Unconditional logistic regression analysis was performed, adjusting for age, gender, year of diagnosis and socio-economic index (SEI).

Use of mobile phones of the analogue type gave odds ratio (OR) = 2.9, 95% confidence interval (CI) = 2.0-4.3, increasing with >20 years latency (time since first exposure) to OR = 7.7, 95% CI = 2.8-21. Digital 2G mobile phone use gave OR = 1.5, 95% CI = 1.1-2.1, increasing with latency >15 years to an OR = 1.8, 95% CI = 0.8-4.2. The results for cordless phone use were OR = 1.5, 95% CI = 1.1-2.1, and, for latency of >20 years, OR = 6.5, 95% CI = 1.7-26. Digital type wireless phones (2G and 3G mobile phones and cordless phones) gave OR = 1.5, 95% CI = 1.1-2.0 increasing to OR = 8.1, 95% CI = 2.0-32 with latency >20 years. For total wireless phone use, the highest risk was calculated for the longest latency time >20 years: OR = 4.4, 95% CI = 2.2-9.0. Several of the calculations in the long latency category were based on low numbers of exposed cases. Ipsilateral use resulted in a higher risk than contralateral for both mobile and cordless phones. OR increased per 100 h cumulative use and per year of latency for mobile phones and cordless phones, though the increase was not statistically significant for cordless phones. The percentage tumour volume increased per year of latency and per 100 h of cumulative use, statistically significant for analogue phones. This study confirmed previous results demonstrating an association between mobile and cordless phone use and acoustic neuroma.


(3) Michael Carlberg, Fredrik Söderqvist, Kjell Hansson Mild, and Lennart Hardell. Meningioma patients diagnosed 2007–2009 and the association with use of mobile and cordless phones: a case–control study. Environmental Health 2013, 12:60. Published online Jul 19, 2013.

Abstract

Background  To study the association between use of wireless phones and meningioma.

Methods  We performed a case–control study on brain tumour cases of both genders aged 18–75 years and diagnosed during 2007–2009. One population-based control matched on gender and age was used to each case. Here we report on meningioma cases including all available controls. Exposures were assessed by a questionnaire. Unconditional logistic regression analysis was performed.

Results  In total 709 meningioma cases and 1,368 control subjects answered the questionnaire. Mobile phone use in total produced odds ratio (OR)=1.0, 95% confidence interval (CI)=0.7-1.4 and cordless phone use gave OR=1.1, 95% CI=0.8-1.5. The risk increased statistically significant per 100 h of cumulative use and highest OR was found in the fourth quartile (>2,376 hours) of cumulative use for all studied phone types. There was no statistically significant increased risk for ipsilateral mobile or cordless phone use, for meningioma in the temporal lobe or per year of latency. Tumour volume was not related to latency or cumulative use in hours of wireless phones.

Conclusions  No conclusive evidence of an association between use of mobile and cordless phones and meningioma was found. An indication of increased risk was seen in the group with highest cumulative use but was not supported by statistically significant increasing risk with latency. Results for even longer latency periods of wireless phone use than in this study are desirable.



Thursday, September 12, 2013

American Academy of Pediatrics: Protect Children from Cell Phone & Wireless Radiation







Letter from the American Academy of Pediatrics to the FCC 
Regarding Radiofrequency Electromagnetic Radiation Standards
 

The American Academy of Pediatrics submitted the following letter to the Federal Communications Commission (FCC). 

The letter "urges the FCC to adopt radiation standards" that 1) protect children's health and well-being from radiation emitted by cell phones and other wireless devices; 2) reflect how people actually use their cell phones; and 3)  provide sufficient information that enables consumers to make informed decisions when they purchase mobile phones.

The letter is also  available on the FCC's web site at http://bit.ly/17tQclg.


August 29, 2013

The Honorable Mignon L. Clyburn
Acting Commissioner 
Federal Communications Commission 
445 12th Street SW 
Washington, DC 20054

The Honorable Dr. Margaret A. Hamburg
Commissioner 
U.S. Food and Drug Administration 
10903 New Hampshire Avenue 
Silver Spring, MD 20993
 


Dear Acting Chairwoman Clyburn and Commissioner Hamburg:

The American Academy of Pediatrics (AAP), a non-profit professional organization of 60,000 primary care pediatricians, pediatric medical subspecialists, and pediatric surgical specialists dedicated to the health, safety and well-being of infants, children, adolescents, and young adults appreciates this opportunity to comment on the Proposed Rule “Reassessment of Exposure to Radiofrequency Electromagnetic Fields Limits and Policies” published in the Federal Register on June 4, 2013.
 
In the past few years, a number of American and international health and scientific bodies have contributed to the debate over cell phone radiation and its possible link to cancer. The International Agency for Research on Cancer (IARC), part of the United Nations’ World Health Organization, said in June 2011 that a family of frequencies that includes mobile-phone emissions is “possibly carcinogenic to humans.” The National Cancer Institute has stated that although studies have not demonstrated that RF energy from cell phones definitively causes cancer, more research is needed because cell phone technology and cell phone use are changing rapidly. These studies and others clearly demonstrate the need for further research into this area and highlight the importance of reassessing current policy to determine if it is adequately protective of human health. 

As radiation standards are reassessed, the AAP urges the FCC to adopt radiation standards that: 
  • Protect children’s health and well-being. Children are not little adults and are disproportionately impacted by all environmental exposures, including cell phone radiation. Current FCC standards do not account for the unique vulnerability and use patterns specific to pregnant women and children. It is essential that any new standard for cell phones or other wireless devices be based on protecting the youngest and most vulnerable populations to ensure they are safeguarded throughout their lifetimes. 
  • Reflect current use patterns. The FCC has not assessed the standard for cell phone radiation since 1996. Approximately 44 million people had mobile phones when the standard was set; today, there are more than 300 million mobile phones in use in the United States. While the prevalence of wireless phones and other devices has skyrocketed, the behaviors around cell phone uses have changed as well. The number of mobile phone calls per day, the length of each call, and the amount of time people use mobile phones has increased, while cell phone and wireless technology has undergone substantial changes. Many children, adolescents and young adults, now use cell phones as their only phone line and they begin using wireless phones at much younger ages. Pregnant women may carry their phones for many hours per day in a pocket that keeps the phone close to their uterus. Children born today will experience a longer period of exposure to radio-frequency fields from cellular phone use than will adults, because they start using cellular phones at earlier ages and will have longer lifetime exposures. FCC regulations should reflect how people are using their phones today. 
  • Provide meaningful consumer disclosure. The FCC has noted that it does not provide consumers with sufficient information about the RF exposure profile of individual phones to allow consumers to make informed purchasing decisions. The current metric of RF exposure available to consumers, the Specific Absorption Rate, is not an accurate predictor of actual exposure. AAP is supportive of FCC developing standards that provide consumers with the information they need to make informed choices in selecting mobile phone purchases, and to help parents to better understand any potential risks for their children. To that end, we support the use of metrics that are specific to the exposure children will experience. 

The AAP supports the reassessment of radiation standards for cell phones and other wireless products and the adoption of standards that are protective of children and reflect current use patterns. If you have questions, please contact Clara Filice in the AAP’s Washington Office at 202/347-8600.

Sincerely, 


Thomas K. McInerny, MD FAAP
President

Friday, July 19, 2013

FCC: Radiofrequency Radiation Exposure

July 19, 2013

The Federal Communications Commission (FCC) is considering changes to the exposure policy for radiofrequency (RF) radiation in the United States. The agency has requested comments be submitted by September 3, 2013.

We need to deliver scientific information to policy makers in a credible and understandable fashion to protect the future health and safety of our children and grandchildren.

Grassroots Environmental Education has launched a comments web site to help scientists, medical and public health professionals, and technical and policy experts from around the world to submit comments and peer-reviewed publications to the FCC.  

RF Rad Comments is a cooperative project bringing together individuals and organizations concerned about reducing human exposure to RF radiation (e.g., cell phones and cordless phones, Wi-Fi and Smart Meters).

The site describes two options for submitting comments: (1) through the RF Rad web site, or (2) directly to the FCC.

The site contains a list of key issues and reference documents. Since the site is a work in progress, your comments on the web site are appreciated. Please send them to gee@grassrootsinfo.org.

Please feel free to forward this message. We greatly appreciate your assistance in this effort.
 

Sincerely,

Joel M. Moskowitz, Ph.D.
School of Public Health
University of California, Berkeley

Electromagnetic Radiation Safety

Website:               http://saferemr.blogspot.com
Facebook:            http://www.facebook.com/SaferEMR
News Releases:   http://pressroom.prlog.org/jmm716
Twitter:                   @berkeleyprc