Mobile phones don't cause brain tumours

James Delahunty
22 Jan 2006 15:09

The results of a four-year study conducted in the UK have indicated that no matter how frequently you make calls with a mobile phone, your risk of developing brain tumors remains the same. The results were published Friday in the British Medical Journal. It focused on the incidence of glioma in phone users. Glioma is the most common form of brain tumor. The study was conducted by the Leeds, Nottingham and Manchester Universities in conjunction with London's Institute of Cancer Research.
966 people aged between 18 and 69 with glioma brain tumors were interviewed along with 1,716 randomly selected healthy individuals. The interviews took place between 1 December 2000 and 29 February 2004. Researchers asked questions about how frequently the phone users made calls, the average duration of the calls and even the make and model of the phone itself.
The results contradicted earlier studies including one Swedish study that showed mobile users in rural areas had an increased risk of tumors because base-stations are further apart, forcing the phone to operate at higher power. The UK study found no evidence to support this link. However, other past studies also pointed to increased risk on the side of the brain closest to where users hold their phones.
The UK study also observed a "significant excess risk" here. The results indicated a "significant reduction in risk" on the other side of the brain however, leading the researchers to conclude that there is insufficient evidence that such a phenomenon exists. The researchers also pointed out that widespread mobile phone usage hasn't been going on long enough to provide a proper risk assessment.
Source:
The Register

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