No link between mobile phones and brain cancer, WHO-backed study says
A woman uses her mobile phone while holding a placard reading " STOP 5G" during a protest against 5G technology, in Bucharest, Romania, January 25, 2020. Inquam Photos/Octav Ganea via REUTERS/File Photo
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There is no link
between mobile phone use and an increased risk of brain cancer, according to a
new World Health Organization-commissioned review of available published
evidence worldwide.
Despite the huge rise in the use of wireless technology, there has not been a corresponding increase in the incidence of brain cancers, the review, published on Tuesday, found.
That applies even to people who make long phone calls or those who have used
mobile phones for more than a decade.
The final analysis
included 63 studies from 1994-2022, assessed by 11 investigators from 10
countries, including the Australian government’s radiation protection
authority.
The work assessed the
effects of radiofrequency, used in mobile phones as well as TV, baby monitors
and radar, co-author Mark Elwood, professor of cancer epidemiology at the
University of Auckland, New Zealand, said.
"None of the major
questions studied showed increased risks," he said. The review looked at
cancers of the brain in adults and children, as well as cancer of the pituitary
gland, salivary glands and leukemia, and risks linked to mobile phone use, base
stations, or transmitters, as well as occupational exposure. Other cancer types
will be reported separately.
The review follows
other similar work. The WHO and other international health bodies have said
previously there is no definitive evidence of adverse health effects from the
radiation used by mobile phones, but called for more research. It is currently
classified as "possibly carcinogenic", or class 2B, by the
International Agency for Research on Cancer (IARC), a category used when the
agency cannot rule out a potential link.
The agency's advisory
group has called for the classification to be re-evaluated as soon as possible
given the new data since its last assessment in 2011.
WHO's evaluation will
be released in the first quarter of next year.

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