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- <text id=93TT2428>
- <title>
- Feb. 08, 1993: Dialing "P" For Panic
- </title>
- <history>
- TIME--The Weekly Newsmagazine--1993
- Feb. 08, 1993 Cyberpunk
- </history>
- <article>
- <source>Time Magazine</source>
- <hdr>
- HEALTH, Page 56
- Dialing "P" For Panic
- </hdr>
- <body>
- <p>Can cellular phones cause brain cancer? There's scant evidence
- but lots of fear.
- </p>
- <p>By PHILIP ELMER-DEWITT - With reporting by Janice M. Horowitz/New
- York
- </p>
- <p> It was the buzz of boardrooms, power lunches and anxious
- phone calls from the freeway. It was debated by stockbrokers,
- real estate agents, Hollywood producers and media Bigfeet.
- Mid-level executives who wouldn't leave home without a phone in
- their pocket--or at their ear--were putting off calls or
- finding other ways to make them. Sales of cellular radio
- telephones--which had been growing at a sizzling 20% to 70%
- a year for the past decade--were temporarily put on hold.
- </p>
- <p> Do cellular phones really cause brain tumors? The safety
- of the ultimate yuppie accessory was called into question by
- the news that two prominent executives had been stricken by
- brain cancer (though the connection to phone use is unclear) and
- by a well-publicized lawsuit in which a Florida man charged
- that his wife's fatal brain tumor was caused by her cellular
- phone.
- </p>
- <p> It was not the kind of evidence that would be accepted by
- the New England Journal of Medicine, but it struck a nerve.
- Viewers tuned in to hear David Reynard, the Florida widower,
- tell the story of his wife's death to Larry King, Bryant Gumbel,
- Faith Daniels and dozens of radio talk-show hosts. Sally
- Atwater, the widow of late Republican political guru Lee
- Atwater, got half a dozen calls from reporters asking whether
- her husband's brain tumor was linked to his constant
- cellular-phone use (she could not say). "It seems like yet
- another technology that is out to get us," said NBC's chief
- White House correspondent, Andrea Mitchell, who became addicted
- to her cellular phone while covering the 1992 election.
- </p>
- <p> Even Wall Street took notice, knocking a couple of points
- off McCaw Cellular, Contel Cellular and Motorola the day after
- Reynard's appearance on the Larry King Live show, and then
- extending the sell-off through much of last week. The Cellular
- Telecommunications Industry Association was finally forced to
- respond, announcing last Friday that it would fund new studies
- and ask the government to review the findings.
- </p>
- <p> The phone flap is the latest in a series of scares linking
- everyday electrical objects (hair dryers, electric razors,
- electric blankets, home computers) to one dread disease or
- another. Most of the concern has focused on the low-frequency
- end of the spectrum: the electromagnetic fields surrounding
- power lines, electric motors and video-display terminals.
- Cellular phones occupy another part of the spectrum. They send
- their signals using very small bursts of high-frequency
- electromagnetic waves, or microwaves, favored for most
- over-the-air telecommunications.
- </p>
- <p> The low- and high-frequency controversies have one thing
- in common: in each case the electromagnetic waves or fields are
- too weak to affect human tissue by any well-understood
- mechanism. They are not known to disrupt living cells or alter
- DNA the way X-rays and ultraviolet radiation do. If these fields
- do indeed cause cancer, it is by a mechanism yet to be
- uncovered.
- </p>
- <p> Despite the panic, the case against cell ular phones is
- nowhere near as strong as the ones mounted against electric
- power lines, electric blankets or even hand-held police radars.
- Dozens of highway patrolmen have come forward to complain of
- tumors of the eye, the cheek or the testicles (from jamming
- radar guns between their legs). And there is a growing body of
- evidence showing that living near power lines can quadruple the
- risk of contracting childhood leukemia.
- </p>
- <p> Since 1982, 10 million cellular phones have been sold in
- the U.S., and so far there have been only a few anecdotal
- reports of brain cancers among users. Given the gestation period
- for most cancers, it may be some time before the true effects
- emerge.
- </p>
- <p> No one really understands the long-term health
- consequences of holding a microwave transmitter next to your
- brain because nobody has thoroughly studied them. To ease fears,
- Motorola held a press conference last week and claimed that
- "thousands of studies" had proved their cellular telephones
- safe. But when asked to name three studies that showed the
- phones do not cause tumors, a company spokesman could cite only
- one 10-year-old report and two others with ambiguous results.
- "If that's the best they can do, they're in deep trouble," said
- Louis Slesin, publisher of Microwave News, a newsletter that has
- devoted extensive coverage to the risks of electromagnetic
- radiation.
- </p>
- <p> Slesin recommends that cellular-telephone owners practice
- what he calls prudent avoidance. "If you can use an ordinary
- phone, do." If mobility is required, he suggests either a
- trunk-mounted car phone or a two-piece cellular model that
- separates the hand-held receiver from the microwave transmitter.
- (So-called cordless portable phones use a different frequency
- and far less power, and they have not been associated with any
- adverse health effects.)
- </p>
- <p> The cellular-phone controversy could put a crimp in the
- industry's plans for growth. Motorola wants to build more
- powerful phones that can bounce their signals off low-flying
- satellites. Apple and AT&T plan to connect pocket phones, laptop
- computers and electronic notepads through a "wireless world" of
- microwaves. But before consumers buy into a pervasive network
- of cellular devices, they might well demand some answers about
- the one that is already in place.
- </p>
-
- </body>
- </article>
- </text>
-
-