Fda update on mobile phone safety – Siemens S40 User Manual

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FDA Update on mobile phone safety

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sure level drops off dramatically

with distance. For example, they

could switch to

• A mobile phone in which the

antenna is located outside the vehi-

cle,

• A hand-held phone with a built-in

antenna connected to a different

antenna mounted on the outside of

the car or built into a separate

package, or

• A headset with a remote antenna

to a mobile phone carried at the

waist.

Where can I find additional infor-

mation?

For additional information, see the

following websites:

Federal Communications

Commission (FCC) RF Safety

Program (select “Information on

Human Exposure to RF Fields from

Cellular and PCS Radio

Transmitters”):

http://www.fcc.gov/oet/rfsafety.

World Health Organization (WHO)

International Commission on Non-

Ionizing Radiation Protection (select

Qs & As): http://www.who.int/emf

United Kingdom, National

Radiological Protection Board:

http://www.nrpb.org.uk

Cellular Telecommunications

Industry Association (CTIA):

http://www.wow-com.com

U.S. Food and Drug Administration

(FDA) Center for devices and

Radiological Health:

Http://www.fda.gov/cdhr/consumer/

1) Muscat et al. Epidemiological

Study of Cellular Telephone Use

and Malignant Brain Tumors. In:

State of the Science Symposium;

1999 June 20; Long Beach,

California.

2) Tice et al. Tests of mobile phone

signals for activity in genotoxicity

and other laboratory assays. In:

Annual Meeting of the

Environmental Mutagen Society;

March 29, 1999, Washington, DC;

and personal communication,

unpublished results.

3) Preece, AW, Iwi, G, Davies-

Smith, A, Wesnes, K, Butler, S, Lim,

E, and Varey, A. Effect of a 915-

MHz simulated mobile phone sig-

nal on cognitive function in man.

Int. J. Radiat. Biol., April 8, 1999.

4) Hardell, L, Nasman, A, Pahlson,

A, Hallquist, A and Mild, KH. Use

of cellular telephones and the risk

for brain tumors; a case-control

study. Int. J. Oncol, 15: 113-116,

1999.

number of steps to assure public

safety. The agency has recom-

mended that the industry:

• Support needed research into

possible biological effects of RF of

the type emitted by mobile

phones;

• Design mobile phones in a way

that minimizes any RF exposure to

the user that is not necessary for

device function; and

• Cooperate in providing mobile

phone users with the best possible

information on what is known

about possible effects of mobile

phone use on human health.

At the same time, FDA belongs

to an interagency working group of

the federal agencies that have

responsibility for different as-pects

of mobile phone safety to ensure a

coordinated effort at the federal

level. These agencies are:

• National Institute for Occupational

Safety and Health

• Environmental Protection Agency

• Federal Communications

Commission

• Occupational Health and Safety

Administration

• National Telecommunications and

Information Administration

The National Institutes of Health

also participates in this group.

In the absence of conclusive

information about any possible

risk, what can concerned indi-

viduals do?

If there is a risk from these prod-

ucts—and at this point we do not

know that there is—it is probably

very small. But if people are con-

cerned about avoiding even poten-

tial risks, there are simple steps

they can take to do so.

For example, time is a key factor

in how much exposure a person

receives. Those persons who

spend long periods of time on their

hand-held mobile phones could

consider holding lengthy conversa-

tions on conventional phones and

reserving the hand-held models for

shorter conversations or for situa-

tions when other types of phones

are not available.

People who must conduct ex-

tended conversations in their cars

every day could switch to a type of

mobile phone that places more dis-

tance between their bodies and the

source of the RF, since the expo-

User guide S40 US 11/01/01 9:30 Side 90

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