Motorola 009 User Manual

Page 174

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174

Accompli 009 User’s Guide

H e a l t h a n d S a f e t y

How much evidence is there that hand-held mobile phones might be
harmful?

Briefly, there is not enough evidence to know for sure, either way;

however, research efforts are on-going. The existing scientific

evidence is conflicting and many of the studies that have been done

to date have suffered from flaws in their research methods. Animal

experiments investigating the effects of RF exposures characteristic

of mobile phones have yielded conflicting results. A few animal

studies, however, have suggested that low levels of RF could

accelerate the development of cancer in laboratory animals. In one

study, mice genetically altered to be predisposed to developing one

type of cancer developed more than twice as many such cancers

when they were exposed to RF energy compared to controls. There

is much uncertainty among scientists about whether results obtained

from animal studies apply to the use of mobile phones. First, it is

uncertain how to apply the results obtained in rats and mice to

humans. Second, many of the studies that showed increased tumor

development used animals that had already been treated with cancer-

causing chemicals, and other studies exposed the animals to the RF

virtually continuously--up to 22 hours per day.

For the past five years in the United States, the mobile phone industry

has supported research into the safety of mobile phones. This

research has resulted in two findings in particular that merit additional

study:

In a hospital-based, case-control study, researchers looked for an

association between mobile phone use and either glioma (a type of

brain cancer) or acoustic neuroma (a benign tumor of the nerve

sheath). No statistically significant association was found between

mobile phone use and acoustic neuroma. There was also no

association between mobile phone use and gliomas when all types

of types of gliomas were considered together. It should be noted that

the average length of mobile phone exposure in this study was less

than three years.

When 20 types of glioma were considered separately, however, an

association was found between mobile phone use and one rare type

of glioma, neuroepithelliomatous tumors. It is possible with multiple

comparisons of the same sample that this association occurred by

chance. Moreover, the risk did not increase with how often the mobile

phone was used, or the length of the calls. In fact, the risk actually

decreased with cumulative hours of mobile phone use. Most cancer

causing agents increase risk with increased exposure. An ongoing

study of brain cancers by the National Cancer Institute is expected to

bear on the accuracy and repeatability of these results.(1)

Accompli 009 User's Guide_.book Page 174 Wednesday, June 26, 2002 2:56 PM

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