Public Health Researcher: Smartphones Emit Harmful Radiation — Here’s How to Reduce Your Risk

Via Children’s Health Defense

'People are addicted to their smartphones.'

For more than a decade, Joel Moskowitz, a researcher in the School of Public Health at UC Berkeley and director of Berkeley’s Center for Family and Community Health, has been on a quest to prove that radiation from cellphones is unsafe. But, he said, most people don’t want to hear it.

“People are addicted to their smartphones,” said Moskowitz. “We use them for everything now, and, in many ways, we need them to function in our daily lives. I think the idea that they’re potentially harming our health is too much for some people.”

Since cellphones first came onto the market in 1983, they have gone from clunky devices with bad reception to today’s sleek, multifunction smartphones. And although cellphones are now used by nearly all American adults, considerable research suggests that long-term use poses health risks from the radiation they emit, said Moskowitz.

“Cellphones, cell towers and other wireless devices are regulated by most governments,” said Moskowitz. “Our government, however, stopped funding research on the health effects of radiofrequency radiation in the 1990s.”

Since then, he said, research has shown significant adverse biologic and health effects — including brain cancer — associated with the use of cellphones and other wireless devices.

And now, he said, with the fifth generation of cellular technology, known as 5G, there is an even bigger reason for concern.

Berkeley News spoke with Moskowitz about the health risks of cellphone radiation, why the topic is so controversial and what we can expect with the rollout of 5G.

Berkeley News: I first heard you speak about the health risks of cellphone radiation at Berkeley in 2019, but you’ve been doing this research since 2009. What led you to pursue this research?

Joel Moskowitz: I got into this field by accident, actually. During the past 40 years, the bulk of my research has been focused on tobacco-related disease prevention. I first became interested in cellphone radiation in 2008, when Dr. Seung-Kwon Myung, a physician scientist with the National Cancer Center of South Korea, came to spend a year at the Center for Family and Community Health. He was involved in our smoking cessation projects, and we worked with him and his colleagues on two reviews of the literature, one of which addressed the tumor risk from cellphone use.

At that time, I was skeptical that cellphone radiation could be harmful. However, since I was dubious that cellphone radiation could cause cancer, I immersed myself in the literature regarding the biological effects of low-intensity microwave radiation, emitted by cellphones and other wireless devices.

After reading many animal toxicology studies that found that this radiation could increase oxidative stress — free radicals, stress proteins and DNA damage — I became increasingly convinced that what we were observing in our review of human studies was indeed a real risk.

Berkeley News: While Myung and his colleagues were visiting the Center for Family and Community Health, you reviewed case-control studies examining the association between mobile phone use and tumor risk. What did you find?

Joel Moskowitz: Our 2009 review, published in the Journal of Clinical Oncology, found that heavy cellphone use was associated with increased brain cancer incidence, especially in studies that used higher quality methods and studies that had no telecommunications industry funding.

Last year, we updated our review, published in the International Journal of Environmental Research and Public Health, based on a meta-analysis of 46 case-control studies — twice as many studies as we used for our 2009 review — and obtained similar findings. Our main takeaway from the current review is that approximately 1,000 hours of lifetime cellphone use, or about 17 minutes per day over a 10-year period, is associated with a statistically significant 60% increase in brain cancer.

Berkeley News: One thing I think we should address upfront is how controversial this research is. Some scientists have said that these findings are without basis and that there isn’t enough evidence that cellphone radiation is harmful to our health. How do you respond to that?

Joel Moskowitz: Well, first of all, few scientists in this country can speak knowledgeably about the health effects of wireless technology. So, I’m not surprised that people are skeptical, but that doesn’t mean the findings aren’t valid.

A big reason there isn’t more research about the health risks of radiofrequency radiation exposure is because the U.S. government stopped funding this research in the 1990s, with the exception of a $30 million rodent study published in 2018 by the National Institute of Environmental Health Sciences’ National Toxicology Program, which found “clear evidence” of carcinogenicity from cellphone radiation.

In 1996, the Federal Communications Commission, or FCC, adopted exposure guidelines that limited the intensity of exposure to radiofrequency radiation. These guidelines were designed to prevent significant heating of tissue from short-term exposure to radiofrequency radiation, not to protect us from the effects of long-term exposure to low levels of modulated, or pulsed, radiofrequency radiation, which is produced by cellphones, cordless phones and other wireless devices, including Wi-Fi. Yet, the preponderance of research published since 1990 finds adverse biologic and health effects from long-term exposure to radiofrequency radiation, including DNA damage.

More than 250 scientists, who have published over 2,000 papers and letters in professional journals on the biologic and health effects of non-ionizing electromagnetic fields produced by wireless devices, including cellphones, have signed the International EMF Scientist Appeal, which calls for health warnings and stronger exposure limits. So, there are many scientists who agree that this radiation is harmful to our health.

Berkeley News: Why did the government stop funding this kind of research?

Joel Moskowitz: The telecommunications industry has almost complete control of the FCC, according to Captured Agency, a monograph written by journalist Norm Alster during his 2014-15 fellowship at Harvard University’s Center for Ethics. There’s a revolving door between the membership of the FCC and high-level people within the telecom industry that’s been going on for a couple of decades now.

The industry spends about $100 million a year lobbying Congress. The CTIA, which is the major telecom lobbying group, spends $12.5 million per year on 70 lobbyists. According to one of their spokespersons, lobbyists meet roughly 500 times a year with the FCC to lobby on various issues. The industry as a whole spends $132 million a year on lobbying and provides $18 million in political contributions to members of Congress and others at the federal level.

Berkeley News: It reminds me of when the U.S. Surgeon General released a landmark report in 1964 that linked cigarettes with dangerous health effects, including cancer and heart disease. Even though the 10-person committee consulted more than 7,000 articles already available in biomedical literature, the report’s findings were very controversial when they came out.

Joel Moskowitz: Yes, there are strong parallels between what the telecom industry has done and what the tobacco industry has done, in terms of marketing and controlling messaging to the public. In the 1940s, tobacco companies hired doctors and dentists to endorse their products to reduce public health concerns about smoking risks.

The CTIA currently uses a nuclear physicist from academia to assure policymakers that microwave radiation is safe. The telecom industry not only uses the tobacco industry playbook, it is more economically and politically powerful than Big Tobacco ever was. This year, the telecom industry will spend over $18 billion advertising cellular technology worldwide.

Berkeley News: You mentioned that cellphones and other wireless devices use modulated, or pulsed, radiofrequency radiation. Can you explain how cellphones and other wireless devices work, and how the radiation they emit is different from radiation from other household appliances, like a microwave?

Joel Moskowitz: Basically, when you make a call, you’ve got a radio and a transmitter. It transmits a signal to the nearest cell tower. Each cell tower has a geographic cell, so to speak, in which it can communicate with cellphones within that geographic region or cell.

Then, that cell tower communicates with a switching station, which then searches for whom you’re trying to call, and it connects through a copper cable or fiber optics or, in many cases, a wireless connection through microwave radiation with the wireless access point. Then, that access point either communicates directly through copper wires through a landline or, if you’re calling another cellphone, it will send a signal to a cell tower within the cell of the receiver and so forth.

The difference is the kind of microwave radiation each device emits. With regard to cellphones and Wi-Fi and Bluetooth, there is an information-gathering component. The waves are modulated and pulsed in a very different manner than your microwave oven.

Berkeley News: What, specifically, are some of the health effects associated with long-term exposure to low-level modulated radiofrequency radiation emitted from wireless devices?

Joel Moskowitz: Many biologists and electromagnetic field scientists believe the modulation of wireless devices makes the energy more biologically active, which interferes with our cellular mechanisms, opening up calcium channels, for example, and allowing calcium to flow into the cell and into the mitochondria within the cell, interfering with our natural cellular processes and leading to the creation of stress proteins and free radicals and, possibly, DNA damage. And, in other cases, it may lead to cell death.

In 2001, based upon the biologic and human epidemiologic research, low-frequency fields were classified as “possibly carcinogenic” by the International Agency for Research on Cancer of the World Health Organization. In 2011, the agency classified radiofrequency radiation as “possibly carcinogenic to humans,” based upon studies of cellphone radiation and brain tumor risk in humans. Currently, we have considerably more evidence that would warrant a stronger classification.

Most recently, on March 1, 2021, a report was released by the former director of the National Center for Environmental Health at the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, which concluded that there is a “high probability” that radiofrequency radiation emitted by cellphones causes gliomas and acoustic neuromas, two types of brain tumors.

Berkeley News: Let’s talk about the fifth generation of cellphone technology, known as 5G, which is already available in limited areas across the U.S. What does this mean for cellphone users and what changes will come with it?

Joel Moskowitz: For the first time, in addition to microwaves, this technology will employ millimeter waves, which are much higher frequency than the microwaves used by 3G and 4G. Millimeter waves can’t travel very far, and they’re blocked by fog or rain, trees and building materials, so the industry estimates that it’ll need 800,000 new cell antenna sites.

Each of these sites may have cell antennas from various cellphone providers, and each of these antennas may have microarrays consisting of dozens or even perhaps hundreds of little antennas. In the next few years in the U.S., we will see deployed roughly 2.5 times more antenna sites than in current use unless wireless safety advocates and their representatives in Congress or the judicial system put a halt to this.

Berkeley News: How are millimeter waves different from microwaves, in terms of how they affect our bodies and the environment?

Joel Moskowitz: Millimeter wave radiation is largely absorbed in the skin, the sweat glands, the peripheral nerves, the eyes and the testes, based upon the body of research that’s been done on millimeter waves. In addition, this radiation may cause hypersensitivity and biochemical alterations in the immune and circulatory systems — the heart, the liver, kidneys and brain.

Millimeter waves can also harm insects and promote the growth of drug-resistant pathogens, so it’s likely to have some widespread environmental effects for the micro-environments around these cell antenna sites.

Berkeley News: What are some simple things that each of us can do to reduce the risk of harm from radiation from cellphones and other wireless devices?

Joel Moskowitz: First, minimize your use of cellphones or cordless phones — use a landline whenever possible. If you do use a cellphone, turn off the Wi-Fi and Bluetooth if you’re not using them. However, when near a Wi-Fi router, you would be better off using your cellphone on Wi-Fi and turning off the cellular because this will likely result in less radiation exposure than using the cellular network.

Second, distance is your friend. Keeping your cellphone 10 inches away from your body, as compared to one-tenth of an inch, results in a 10,000-fold reduction in exposure. So, keep your phone away from your head and body. Store your phone in a purse or backpack. If you have to put it in your pocket, put it on airplane mode. Text, use wired headphones or speakerphone for calls. Don’t sleep with it next to your head — turn it off or put it in another room.

Third, use your phone only when the signal is strong. Cellphones are programmed to increase radiation when the signal is poor, that is when one or two bars are displayed on your phone. For example, don’t use your phone in an elevator or in a car, as metal structures interfere with the signal.

Also, I encourage people to learn more about the 150-plus local groups affiliated with Americans for Responsible Technology, which are working to educate policymakers, urging them to adopt cell tower regulations and exposure limits that fully protect us and the environment from the harm caused by wireless radiation.

For safety tips on how to reduce exposure to wireless radiation from the California Department of Public Health and other organizations, visit Moskowitz’s website, saferemr.com, Physicians for Safe Technology and the Environmental Health Trust.

Originally published by Berkeley News.

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14 Comments
B_MC
B_MC
July 12, 2021 6:56 pm

Along those lines, Anonymous Conservative had posted this link and comment on his blog…

Electric vehicle lawsuit claims prolonged driving while sitting on a giant battery caused an electromagnetic radiation injury. The legal aspect is unimportant, as I have no idea its relation to the reality. What I was thinking about was an article about how powerful these new electromagnetic motors are. They can actually propel cars at motorcycle speeds, a process which entails generating an alternating magnetic field to drive the magnets on the motors, which themselves are incredibly powerful magnets moving through space, creating their own flux in the electromagnetic fields around the car. I never thought about the powers of the moving magnetic fields required to propel a car-sized weight from 0 to 60 in under 3 seconds, or what 3 hours of commuting, encased within such an electromagnetic field in flux might do to one biologically. Electromagnetic fields have been associated with both activation of viruses such as Epstein Barr, possibly through effects on the immune system, and perhaps relatedly, with cancers such as lymphomas. Food for thought. You might want to let the electric car phenomenon take off for ten years or so, and see if anything interesting happens to the adopters, before jumping on the bandwagon yourself. Along those lines, I wonder what effect having graphene nano-particles congregating in certain organs might have on someone housed within an electromagnetic field in regular and very strong flux for a few hours per day.

https://www.activistpost.com/2021/07/electric-vehicle-lawsuit-prolonged-driving-while-sitting-on-giant-battery-caused-electromagnetic-radiation-injury.html?utm_source=feedburner&utm_medium=feed&utm_campaign=Feed%3A+ActivistPost+%28Activist+Post%29

Source: http://www.anonymousconservative.com/blog/

Stucky
Stucky
  B_MC
July 12, 2021 7:07 pm

In all the years of my reading about the pros-cons of electric vehicles, I don’t recall ever seeing this … nor have I considered it.

I will NEVER buy an electric car (that decision was made long ago). But, now I wonder if I should ever even be a passenger in one for more than 30 minutes, or so.

THANK YOU for this info!!

MrLiberty
MrLiberty
July 12, 2021 7:18 pm

Radiation of all kinds is killing us all. The truth of all of this will be as obvious as the truth of why the bodies are stacked six feet high in the street. But by then it will all be too late for everyone.

Ken31
Ken31
  MrLiberty
July 12, 2021 8:16 pm

I appreciate the radiation that warms and feeds the planet. I also like to see.

Stucky
Stucky
July 12, 2021 9:00 pm

There’s a revolving door between the membership of the FCC and high-level people within the telecom industry that’s been going on for a couple of decades now.

— spends about $100 million a year lobbying Congress.

— the CTIA spends $12.5 million per year on 70 lobbyists.

— lobbyists meet roughly 500 times a year with the FCC to lobby on various issues

— the industry as a whole spends $132 million a year on lobbying a

— provides $18 million in political contributions to members of Congress and others at the federal level

Shocking!! Unreal!! CRAAAZY!! WTF??

/s

There is not a single government entity that isn’t corrupt to it’s very core. Sooner or later, we’re gonna need a LOT of rope.

fujigm
fujigm
  Stucky
July 12, 2021 10:43 pm

Rope is so yesterday.

Speaking of phones;
Remember AT&T’s wisdom…
“Long distance is the next best thing to being there”
and
“Reach out and touch someone”

ILuvCO2
ILuvCO2
July 12, 2021 9:12 pm

Turn your wifi off every night when you go to bed and don’t leave the cell phone in your bedroom.
And wrap yourself in tin foil when you go to bed ala breaking bad …/sarc on that one.

mark
mark
July 12, 2021 9:49 pm

This is a subject I have recently had some experience with.

Maybe my experience will help someone else?

I had warned my perky, gregarious, social/verbal wife about her excessive cell phone use for years.

The average woman speaks about 20,000 words a day…the average man about 7,000.

Verbally my wife probably uses 25,000 words a day…I don’t mean that as a slight…she is one of the most engaging (popular) people I have ever known…she loves people. She is also still working and I’m a reclusive farmer/prepper/leave me alone ‘don’t thread on me’ knida guy.

My wife has our daughter, two brothers, a sister, and a few close friends in other states. Who she spends time with on her cell…evidently it was red radiation time just like the picture in this article.

She didn’t listen to me about the radiation risks…we got into arguments about it.

Suddenly my perky, gregarious, social wife was:

Not sleeping well. I just figured it was age.

That led to her being tired all the time. Unusual for her.

Then she was unusually stressed…but in a way I had never seen her stressed in 45 years. This is a woman who always carried her own weather with her, bright and sunny (one of the many reasons I married her). At first I thought it was just the Covid bullshit…plus living with an over the top Prepper. (Look…she once told me living with me was like a day at the beach…NORMANDY!)

She became foggy, she lost her perky zip…and then suddenly she lost too much weight.

All her frigg’in doctor wanted to do was give her the euthanasia Jab…(that will never happen) and mask her problem with anti-depressants. I’m disgusted with her doctor…she is just a Medical Industrial Complex drone who wouldn’t hear anything about cell radiation.

I had my wife read a parade of articles like this one…printed them down…and gave them to her doctor too.

I demanded (my wife agreed agreed after reading the articles) she never, ever put that phone next to her head again…always using ear buds or speaker phone. She did.

She had just starting working from home after the above symptoms manifested themselves. At her home office I had the router to the internet placed around the corner from her feet, and found out the one at her office was close to her.

I then realized working from home she had also moved away from a recent 5G tower put up near her old office!

Ho Lee Chit Mun!

I put her on a daily detox program, daily nutritional supplement program (never could get her to this before) and she started using the home sauna I have been using for 14 years.

She took a two week vacation…and with all of the above there was a significant improvement.

Then I finally got her to take a pill with two types of melatonin…regular and ‘time release’ plus 200 mg of L-Theanine…and her sleeping greatly improved. (Her poblem was falling asleep it was staying – I think the time release has made the difference).

It’s been a couple of months now and she is about 99% back to normal.

She now has a completely different attitude to her cell.

I’m subscribed to Children’s Health Defense and showed her this article the other day.

ILuvCO2
ILuvCO2
  mark
July 12, 2021 10:56 pm

mark my friend, got any pointers for vertigo, dizzyness, shakyness. I can’t find a trigger, and it scares the shit out of me. Had to pull over on the way down to SW Virginia this morning from NH and I didn’t even know where the side of the road was. Terrifying. “euthanasia Jab ” Perfect. Come up to HSF’s next year, we can ride up together.

Hunter's crack pipe
Hunter's crack pipe
  ILuvCO2
July 13, 2021 12:39 am

I’ll chime in; do you know how to do the self vestibular (vertigo) treatment? Takes maybe 5 minutes on your bed. Nah, it ain’t the fun kind of bed treatment. I’ll try and add a link. And if that’s not what you need, I tried:

ILuvCO2
ILuvCO2
  Hunter's crack pipe
July 13, 2021 7:19 am

Thank You, I do that maneuver, but did learn from this video (for example, don’t lie flat for 24 hours). Appreciate the help.

mark
mark
  ILuvCO2
July 13, 2021 12:08 pm

ILuvCO2,

I’ve got family coming in and I have to head to the airport soon…but I’ll do some research ASAP…and get back to you here.

Next year at Marc’s is a possibility, I would love to attend!

Tainan
Tainan
  mark
July 13, 2021 3:53 pm

I wonder what the risk is living near high-tension power lines.
I live about 100 yards away from some.

ILuvCO2
ILuvCO2
  Tainan
July 13, 2021 9:34 pm

Don’t live near a cell phone tower.