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Cell Phone Cancer
Ignoring the health risks of heavy cell phone use invites a cancer epidemic,
supporters of a bill requiring manufacturers to put labels on mobile phones and
packaging said Tuesday.
"We can do nothing and wait for the body count. That's what happened with
smoking" before warnings on cigarette packs were mandated, David Carpenter,
director of the Institute for Health and Environment at the University of
Albany, told Maine lawmakers.
The Health and Human Services Committee held a hearing on a bill that would make
Maine the first state to carry warnings that they can cause brain cancer,
especially among children. Opponents dismissed research pointing to the risks
and said the bill is more about politics than science.
The sponsor, Rep. Andrea Boland, said the United States lags behind other
countries that have either mandated similar warnings or endorsed policies
warning the public about cell phone use.
Carpenter, a Harvard Medical School graduate and researcher with expertise in
electromagnetic fields, said the strongest evidence of cell phone dangers comes
from Europe, where the devices have been in use longer than in the United
States. He told lawmakers that the U.S. "may face an epidemic of brain cancer"
if nothing is done to warn consumers of risks.
Boland, D-Sanford, said the risks diminish markedly if the phone is held away
from the head.
Olle Johansson, a scientist at Karolinska Institute in Sweden, submitted
testimony saying that "very serious biological changes" that include cancer
risks have been noticed for years from exposure to low-frequency magnetic fields
like those emitted from cell phones.
Supporters also included brain cancer patient and relatives of victims who said
the disease was triggered by cell phone use.
"When you put that phone to your head, you are unknowingly playing Russian
roulette," said Alan Marks of the San Francisco Bay area, who's been diagnosed
with a brain tumor.
An industry group, TechAmerica, said Boland's bill "substitutes political
judgment for the collective scientific judgment of experts around the world."
Kim Allman, senior vice president of the Washington, D.C.-based group, said in a
statement that scientific evidence so far does not indicate a public health risk
and added that warning labels would be misleading and confusing.
Gov. John Baldacci's administration also opposes the bill.
Dora Anne Mills, director of the state Centers for Disease Control and
Prevention, said research by federal health and safety agencies does not justify
a warning, although she acknowledged that uncertainty exists about the effects
of long-term cell use.
Mills said the federal Food and Drug Administration is already taking
precautionary action by urging the industry to do further research and to design
cell phones to minimize exposure to risks. |
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To learn more inquire these other search
topics: cell phone danger, cell phone cancer, cell phone radiation
shield, electromagnetic field, EMF effects, brain cancer and cell phone, cell phone electromagnetic
radiation |
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