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What can I use to protect myself from cell phone radiation
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Cell Phone Radiation
Most would argue that cell phones have changed our lives for the better. They
have enhanced personal security, quickened emergency response and given us the
ease of instant communication. But the radiation they emit could be placing us
at risk for cancerous brain tumors.
They are the symbols of our time. Cell phones. From Europe, to Asia to the
Middle East, four billion people use them worldwide.
In this Chinese film, aptly titled "Cell Phone," a man's life is destroyed by
his cell phone when he forgets it at home. His wife discovers it and his affair
with a younger woman.
A Senate Hearing this week didn't deal with people's private lives.
International researchers and U.S. lawmakers looked at whether radiation emitted
from cell phones will kill you.
They did agree that some studies have linked heavy, long-term cell phone use to
cancer of the brain.
Physician Siegal Sadetzki advises Israel's Health Ministry. "I believe that
cellphone technology which has many advantages is here to stay," Sadetzki said.
"The question that needs to be answered is not whether we should use cell phones
but how we should use them."
Health warnings to cell phone users have been issued by governments of several
countries.
Dr. Linda Erdreich represents the $4 trillion wireless industry. She says
there's no need for concern. "The current evidence does not demonstrate that
phones cause cancer or other adverse health effects," Dr. Erdreich said.
But Teresa Gregorio's experience raises questions. She says she used a cell
phone, beginning in the mid-1990's, even giving up her land line. Bad news came
in 2008. She has an inoperable brain tumor.
"I had used a cell phone for 2-3 hours a day right here on my right side, right
where my tumor was or is," she explained.
270 million people in America use cell phones. Seventy percent of teens or
pre-teens have them. Younger children are even more vulnerable.
"Radiation gets much more deeply into the head of a 5-year-old or a 3-year-old
than it does into that of an adult," Epidemiologist Devra Lee Davis explained.
She says children, because they have thinner skulls, are more at risk. "The
science needs more work," she said, "but I want to ask are we really prepared to
risk our children's brains until we find out for sure whether this is a hazard?"
Although results of studies on a cancer link are contradictory, scientists are
urging consumers to be safe rather than sorry.
The idea is to keep the phone away from the body. Use earphones or a headset,
keep your phone on your belt-- not in your pocket.
Texting is better. It keeps the radiation down and the phone further away from
you. Senator Tom Harkin chaired the hearing. He says he's just beginning to ask
questions. "I am reminded of this nation's experience with cigarettes. Decades
passed between the first warnings about smoking tobacco and the final definitive
conclusion that cigarettes cause lung cancer," Harkin said. |
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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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