New research has revealed that mobile phones are more
injurious to people’s health than smoking. Why is that? It seems that mobile
phone usage and brain cancer are linked to each other.
According to one of the world’s top neurosurgeons,
Vini Khurana, using mobile phones for 10 years could double the risk of brain
cancer. “This danger has far broader public-health ramifications than asbestos
and smoking,” he told the Independent of London.
Dr. Khurana based his assessment on the fact that three
billion people now use the phones worldwide, which is three times higher than
people who smoke. Smoking kills some five million globally each year.
Dr. Khurana reviewed more than 100 previous studies on the effects of mobile handsets and concluded people should avoid using cell phones whenever possible and called on governments and industry to take “immediate steps” to reduce radiation exposure through the devices.
“In the years 2008-2012, we will have reached the appropriate length of
follow-up time to begin to definitively observe the impact of this global
technology on brain tumor incidence rates,” he said.
The French government has already warned against mobile
phone use, particularly by children. Also,
The Mobile Operators Association, last week, rejected Dr.
Khurana’s study as “a selective discussion of scientific literature by one
individual.” It “does not present a balanced analysis” of the published
science, and “reaches opposite conclusions to the World Health Organization and
more than 30 other independent expert scientific reviews.”
Dr. Khurana posted his analysis on a neurosurgery Web site and a paper about his research is currently under peer review for publication in a leading scientific journal.