LG CF360 User Manual

Page 111

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Safety Guidelines

107

of wireless phones to notify users of the
health hazard and to repair, replace, or
recall the phones so that the hazard no
longer exists.

Although the existing scientific data do not

justify FDA regulatory actions, the FDA has
urged the wireless phone industry to take a
number of steps, including the following:

]

Support needed research into possible

biological effects of RF of the type
emitted by wireless phones;

]

Design wireless phones in a way that

minimizes any RF exposure to the user
that is not necessary for device function;
and

]

Cooperate in providing users of

wireless phones with the best possible
information on possible effects of
wireless phone use on human health.

The FDA belongs to an interagency working

group of the federal agencies that have
responsibility for different aspects of RF
safety to ensure coordinated efforts at
the federal level. The following agencies
belong to this working group:

]

National Institute for Occupational Safety

and Health

]

Environmental Protection Agency

]

Occupational Safety and Health

Administration

]

National Telecommunications and

Information Administration

]

The National Institutes of Health

participates in some interagency working
group activities, as well.

The FDA shares regulatory responsibilities

for wireless phones with the Federal
Communications Commission (FCC). All
phones that are sold in the United States
must comply with FCC safety guidelines
that limit RF exposure. The FCC relies on
the FDA and other health agencies for
safety questions about wireless phones.

The FCC also regulates the base stations

that the wireless phone networks rely
upon. While these base stations operate
at higher power than do the wireless
phones themselves, the RF exposures that
people get from these base stations are
typically thousands of times lower than
those they can get from wireless phones.

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