Australian scientists have conducted groundbreaking research examining potential links between mobile phone use and cancer. The study, commissioned by the World Health Organization, found no significant association between radio wave exposure and various cancer types. Lead researcher Ken Karipidis noted some uncertainty due to limited evidence, but the findings provide important insights into wireless technology's health impacts. This research contributes to ongoing global efforts to understand potential long-term health effects of mobile phone radiation.
February 04, 2025
Australian research finds no link between mobile phones and various cancers
"This is because
there is not as much evidence on the association between these cancers and
exposure to radio waves from wireless technology" - Ken Karipidis, ARPANSA
Canberra, Feb 4: Research led by Australia's nuclear
and radiation safety agency has found no link between mobile phone use and
various cancers.
Key Points
1 Australian
research examines mobile phone radiation's potential cancer risks
2 WHO-commissioned
study explores wireless technology health impacts
3 No
definitive link found between radio waves and cancer types
The research, commissioned by the World Health
Organization (WHO) and published on Tuesday, found no association between radio
wave exposure from mobile phones and various cancers, including leukaemia,
lymphoma and cancers of the thyroid and oral cavity.
It was the second WHO-commissioned systematic review
undertaken by the Australian Radiation Protection and Nuclear Safety Agency
(ARPANSA), reports Xinhua news agency.
The first review, published in September 2024,
explored the association between mobile phone use and brain and other head
cancers and found no link.
Ken Karipidis, the lead author of both studies and
assistant director of Health Impact Assessment at ARPANSA, said the new
research assessed all available evidence on the association between mobile
phones, mobile phone towers and cancers.
He said that the researchers found no link between
radio wave exposure and the various cancers but that the team cannot be as
certain of the results compared to the review on brain cancers.
"This is because there is not as much evidence
on the association between these cancers and exposure to radio waves from
wireless technology," Karipidis said.
Rohan Mate, an ARPANSA scientist who contributed to
the study, said the findings would "add to the body of knowledge to inform
the public about wireless technology and cancer".
The two systematic reviews will inform an updated
assessment of the health effects of radio wave exposure currently being
prepared by the WHO.
According to the WHO, Cancer is a large group of
diseases that can start in almost any organ or tissue of the body when abnormal
cells grow uncontrollably, go beyond their usual boundaries to invade adjoining
parts of the body and/or spread to other organs. The latter process is called
metastasising and is a major cause of death from cancer. A neoplasm and
malignant tumour are other common names for cancer.
Cancer is the second leading cause of death
globally, accounting for an estimated 9.6 million deaths, or 1 in 6 deaths, in
2018. Lung, prostate, colorectal, stomach and liver cancer are the most common
types of cancer in men, while breast, colorectal, lung, cervical and thyroid
cancer are the most common among women.
The cancer burden continues to grow globally,
exerting tremendous physical, emotional and financial strain on individuals,
families, communities and health systems. Many health systems in low- and
middle-income countries are least prepared to manage this burden, and large
numbers of cancer patients globally do not have access to timely quality diagnosis
and treatment.
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