By Brian
Ross
 Oct. 20 — While the cell phone industry has assured consumers for years
that cellular phones are completely safe, the industry’s former research
director has now come forward to say this can no longer be presumed.
ABCNEWS'
Brian Ross reports about new questions on cell phone risks. RealVideo
(download RealPlayer) |
“The industry had come out and said that there were thousands of studies
that proved that wireless phones are safe, and the fact was that there
were no studies that were directly relevant,” says Dr. George Carlo.
For the past six years, Carlo ran the cell
phone industry’s $25 million research program, which has studied the
effects of microwave radiation from cell phones.
“We’ve moved into an area where we now have
some direct evidence of possible harm from cellular phones,” Carlo says in
an interview with ABCNEWS’ 20/20.
Although Carlo does not say that cell phones are unsafe, he does say that
more research is needed. The
$200-billion-a-year cell phone industry maintains the devices are safe.
“There is a preponderance of evidence that
there is not a linkage between the use of wireless phones and health
effects,” says Thomas Wheeler, president of the Cellular
Telecommunications Industry Association, the industry’s trade group.
The industry has announced that it supports
and will sponsor follow-up research.
Electromagnetic Waves Sent Into Brain What many of
the country’s 80 million cell phone users may not know is that cell phones
send electromagnetic waves into users’ brains. In fact, every cell phone
model sold in the United States has a specific measurement of how much
microwave energy from the phone can penetrate the brain.
Depending on how close the cell phone antenna
is to the head, as much as 60 percent of the microwave radiation is
absorbed by and actually penetrates the area around the head, some
reaching an inch to an inch-and-a-half into the brain.
“This is the first generation that has put
relatively high-powered transmitters against the head, day after day,”
says Dr. Ross Adey, who has worked for industry and government for decades
studying microwave radiation, and is one of the most respected scientists
in the field.
Position
Matters The cell phone industry says every phone it sells is
safe and meets government radiation safety limits. But tests conducted by
20/20 and being made public on tonight’s program have found that
some of the country’s most popular cell phones can — depending on how
they’re held — exceed the radiation limit.
20/20 reports that government testing guidelines are so vague that
a phone can pass the Federal Communications Commission’s requirements when
tested in one position and exceed those maximum levels when held in
another position. The cell phone industry
says every phone sold in the United States meets the federal safety
standard, and that there is a huge margin of safety built into the
standard. “There isn’t data to show that what
is happening has a health effect,” Wheeler says, adding that there is no
need for Americans to cut back on their cell phone use.
Along with the test results, the 20/20
story shows how users can significantly reduce their exposure to microwave
radiation from cell phones.
Richard
Allyn and Brenda Breslauer contributed to this report.
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W E B
L I N K S
 Independent Expert Group on Mobile Phones
 Health Risk Management Group
 FDA Consumer Update on Mobile
Phones
 FCC RF Safety Program
 Microwave News
 National Radiological Protection
Board
 International Electromagnetic Fields
Project
 Cell Phone Hazards
 World Health Organization
 National Cancer Institute
 Electric and Magnetic Fields Research
 Federation of the Electronics Industry

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