Articles
Mobile phones 'more dangerous than
smoking'
Brain expert warns of huge rise in tumors and calls on industry to take immediate steps to
reduce radiation
By Geoffrey Lean
Sunday, 30 March 2008
Mobile phones could kill far more people than smoking or asbestos, a study
by an award-winning cancer expert has concluded. He says people should
avoid using them wherever possible and that governments and the mobile
phone industry must take "immediate steps" to reduce exposure to their
radiation.
The study, by Dr Vini Khurana, is the most devastating indictment yet
published of the health risks.
It draws on growing evidence – exclusively reported in the IoS in October –
that using handsets for 10 years or more can double the risk of brain cancer.
Cancers take at least a decade to develop, invalidating official safety
assurances based on earlier studies which included few, if any, people who
had used the phones for that long.
Earlier this year, the French government warned against the use of mobile
phones, especially by children. Germany also advises its people to minimize
handset use, and the European Environment Agency has called for exposures
to be reduced.
Professor Khurana – a top neurosurgeon, who has received 14 awards over
the past 16 years, has published more than three dozen scientific papers –
reviewed more than 100 studies on the effects of mobile phones. He has put
the results on a brain surgery website, and a paper based on the research is
currently being peer-reviewed for publication in a scientific journal.
He admits that mobiles can save lives in emergencies, but concludes that "there is a significant and increasing body of evidence for a link between
mobile phone usage and certain brain tumors". He believes this will be
"definitively proven" in the next decade.
Noting that malignant brain tumors represent "a life-ending diagnosis", he
adds: "We are currently experiencing a reactively unchecked and dangerous
situation." He fears that "unless the industry and governments take
immediate and decisive steps", the incidence of malignant brain tumors and
associated death rate will be observed to rise globally within a decade from
now, by which time it may be far too late to intervene medically.
"It is anticipated that this danger has far broader public health ramifications
than asbestos and smoking," says Professor Khurana, who told the IoS his
assessment is partly based on the fact that three billion people now use the
phones worldwide, three times as many as smoke. Smoking kills some five
million worldwide each year, and exposure to asbestos is responsible for as
many deaths in Britain as road accidents..