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Pastimes : The New Qualcomm - write what you like thread.
QCOM 170.90-1.3%3:59 PM EST

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To: Maurice Winn who wrote (3367)9/4/2001 8:11:10 PM
From: John Soileau  Read Replies (3) of 12231
 
Hey Maurice...

Mobile phone users 'at greater risk of brain tumour'

By Charles Arthur Technology Editor

05 September 2001

People who used mobile phones
for two hours a day in the 1980s
and early 1990s have a
"significantly raised" risk of
developing a brain tumour, a
Swedish scientist has found.

The study by Lennart Hardell, a
cancer specialist at Orebro
University in Sweden, is a
landmark piece of research in the
debate over whether the
microwave radiation put out by
mobile phone handsets can cause
cancer. It is due to be published
later this year. His research
compared 1,600 people who
survived brain tumours with 1,600 healthy people. He found that
those who had used mobile phones for more than five years
were 26 per cent more likely, and those who used them for
more than a decade were 77 per cent more likely, to develop a
brain tumour than those who did not. The tumours were 2.5
times more likely to be on the same side of the head as the
phone was usually held.

The findings will fuel the debate over the use of mobile phones
by children – which grew in intensity yesterday when speakers
at the British Association science conference in Glasgow
condemned companies for encouraging young people to use
the phones.

Professor Hardell said it was not possible to extend his results
directly to modern phones, which emit about 10 times less
power than the older analogue ones. But he did advise adopting
a "precautionary" approach.

Dr Michael Clark, of the National Radiological Protection
Board, which set limits on radiation exposure, said: "A study
like that has to be taken seriously ... But analogue phones
were pretty much phased out around 1997. The new digital
ones emit significantly less power."

Regards,
John
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