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- Newsgroups: sci.med
- Path: sparky!uunet!charon.amdahl.com!amdahl!rtech!pacbell.com!ames!elroy.jpl.nasa.gov!swrinde!news.dell.com!pmafire!russ
- From: russ@pmafire.inel.gov (Russ Brown)
- Message-ID: <1993Jan28.042423.14397@pmafire.inel.gov>
- Date: Thu, 28 Jan 93 04:24:23 GMT
- Organization: WINCO
- Subject: Re: Re: Cellular telephones and brain tumors
- Summary:
- References: <1993Jan8.184423.24814@tella <4126@hpwala.wal.hp.com> <1993Jan28.012310.24738@netcom.com>
- Followup-To:
- Distribution: usa
- Organization: WINCO
- Keywords:
- Lines: 35
-
- In article <1993Jan28.012310.24738@netcom.com> kudzu@netcom.com (Michael Sierchio) writes:
- >In article <4126@hpwala.wal.hp.com> joes@hpwarbz.wal.hp.com writes:
- >>
- >>Also, has anyone ever noticed the large number of people that live directly
- >>under TV transmitter towers? I'm told the field is so strong that one can
- >>cause a fluourecent bulb to glow slightly just by holding it. These
- >>transmitters emit roughly 100KW.....I haven't heard of any anomalies among
- >>people under them......
- >
- >So, they must not exist, huh?
- >
- >1 watt 2" from head is the issue.
- >--
-
- Before everyone gets too excited about an anecdotal (anecdotal evidence
- ranks even lower than case-control analysis!) case of brain cancer,
- remember that some regions of the country, namely Mississippi, northern
- Alabama, and parts of Tennessee have had brain cancer mortality excesses
- for the past 40 year. Other scattered excesses exist elsewhere.
-
- Memphis (Shelby County, TN) had a 35.7% mortality excess for the 1953-87
- interval. Odds of this being a chance occurrence are less than 1 in a
- million. While these observations do not constitute a proof that using
- a cellular phone can't have some negative effect, they do suggest that
- major etiologic factors exist...and, whatever they are, we don't know
- them.
-
- Absent such knowledge, attribution of a case of brain cancer to a
- particular "cause" doesn't make much sense. Unfortunately, we have
- difficulty in accepting the fact that bad things happen for no good (or,
- more precisely, known) reason.
-
-
-
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-