By KATE MURPHY Published: March 30, 2011
In a culture where people cradle their cellphones next to their heads with
the same constancy and affection that toddlers hold their security blankets,
it was unsettling last month when a study published in The Journal of the
American Medical Association indicated that doing so could alter brain
activity.

The report <http://jama.ama-assn.org/content/305/8/808> said it was unclear
whether the changes in the brain — an increase in glucose metabolism after
using the phone for less than an hour — had any negative health or
behavioral effects. But it has many people wondering what they can do to
protect themselves short of (gasp) using a landline.

“Cellphones are fantastic and have done much to increase productivity,” said
Dr. Nora Volkow <http://drugabuse.gov/about/welcome/volkowpage.html>, the
lead investigator of the study and director of the National Institute of
Drug Abuse at the National Institutes of
Health<http://topics.nytimes.com/top/reference/timestopics/organizations/n/national_institutes_of_health/index.html?inline=nyt-org>.
“I’d never tell people to stop using them entirely.”

Yet, in light of her findings, she advises users to keep cellphones at a
distance by putting them on speaker mode or using a wired headset whenever
possible. The next best option is a wireless Bluetooth headset or earpiece,
which emit radiation at far lower levels. If a headset isn’t feasible,
holding your phone just slightly away from your ear can make a big
difference; the intensity of radiation diminishes sharply with distance.
“Every millimeter counts,” said Louis Slesin, editor of Microwave
News<http://www.microwavenews.com/>,
an online newsletter covering health and safety issues related to exposure
to electromagnetic radiation.

So crushing your cellphone into your ear to hear better in a crowded bar is
probably a bad idea. Go outside if you have to take or make a call. And you
might not want to put your cellphone in your breast or pants pocket either,
because that also puts it right up against your body. Carry it in a purse or
briefcase or get a nonmetallic belt clip that orients it away from your
body.

Some studies have suggested a link between cellphone use and
cancer<http://health.nytimes.com/health/guides/disease/cancer/overview.html?inline=nyt-classifier>,
lower bone density and infertility in
men<http://health.nytimes.com/health/guides/disease/infertility-in-men/overview.html?inline=nyt-classifier>.
But other studies show no effect at all. Given the mixed messages and
continuing research, Robert Kenny, a Federal Communications
Commission<http://topics.nytimes.com/top/reference/timestopics/organizations/f/federal_communications_commission/index.html?inline=nyt-org>spokesman,
said in an e-mail, “As always, we will continue to study this
issue and coordinate with our federal partners.”

The phone used in Dr. Volkow’s study was a Samsung Knack, model SCH-U310, a
flip phone that was in wide use when she began planning her experiments two
and half years ago. But today’s ubiquitous smartphones emit even more
radiation as they transmit more, and more complex, data.

You can get an idea of the relative amounts of radiation various cellphone
models emit by looking at their SAR, or specific absorption
rate<http://www.fcc.gov/cgb/consumerfacts/sar.html>.
This number indicates how much radiation is absorbed by the body when using
the handset at maximum power. A cellphone cannot be sold in the United
States unless an F.C.C.-approved laboratory says its SAR is below 1.6 watts
per kilogram. In Europe, the maximum is 2 watts per kilogram.

The SAR number is not displayed when you compare cellphones at your local
wireless store, and trying to find it in the fine print of your user manual
is an exercise in frustration. The F.C.C. maintains that SAR values “do not
provide sufficient information” to reliably compare cellphone radiation
emissions because certain phones might rarely operate at maximum power.
Still, the Environmental Working Group, a nonprofit organization, has
a comprehensive
list <http://www.ewg.org/cellphoneradiation/Get-a-Safer-Phone> of the SAR
values for most cellphones available from major carriers on its Web site.
(For instance, the
Apple<http://topics.nytimes.com/top/news/business/companies/apple_computer_inc/index.html?inline=nyt-org>
iPhone<http://topics.nytimes.com/top/reference/timestopics/subjects/i/iphone/index.html?inline=nyt-classifier>4
is listed at 1.17 watts per kilogram, the Motorola Droid at 1.5 and
the LG
Quantum at 0.35.)

But more important than looking for a low-SAR phone is how you use it. Many
cellphones emit the most radiation when they initially establish contact
with the cell tower, making their “digital handshake.” To reduce exposure
it’s best to wait until after your call has been connected to put your
cellphone next to your ear.

During the ensuing conversation, it’s advisable to tilt the phone away from
your ear when you are talking and only bring it in close to your ear when
you are listening. That bit of teeter-totter works because the emission of
radiation is “significantly less when a cellphone is receiving signals than
when it is transmitting,” said Lin Zhong, assistant professor of electrical
and computer engineering at Rice
University<http://topics.nytimes.com/top/reference/timestopics/organizations/r/rice_university/index.html?inline=nyt-org>in
Houston.

Moreover, your cellphone emits less when you are stationary because when you
are moving rapidly — say, in a car or train — it must repeatedly issue
little bursts of radiation to make digital handshakes with different towers
as it moves in and out of range. (More cause to hang up when you buckle up.)


Want another reason to complain about your carrier’s poor coverage? Any
situation where your cellphone has a weak signal indicates it has to work
harder and thus will emit more radiation. “Fewer bars means more radiation,”
said Om Gandhi, professor of electrical engineering at the University of
Utah<http://topics.nytimes.com/top/reference/timestopics/organizations/u/university_of_utah/index.html?inline=nyt-org>in
Salt Lake City. Inside buildings and elevators, in rural areas, the
Grand
Canyon — these are not good places to make a call if you’re trying to reduce
your exposure to radiation.

Of course, parents using their iPhones to pacify cranky kids might want to
reconsider rattles. Children’s developing brains and tissues are thought to
be most vulnerable to cellphone radiation. Health authorities in Britain,
France, Germany and Russia have all issued warnings against allowing small
children to use cellphones for extended periods, if at all.

There are cellphone attachments that purport to shield users from radiation,
and most are “hoaxes,” said Mr. Gandhi. Beware of pendants that sellers
claim snatch radiation from the air. Pong Research offers a cellphone case
for iPhones and BlackBerrys that it says has been shown by an
F.C.C.-approved testing lab to redirect radiation from the phone’s antenna
away from the head.

While the manufacturer says it reduces radiation more than 60 percent, some
electrical engineering experts question whether the case may have the
opposite effect at orientations where your head is in the way of the cell
tower because your phone may have to increase its transmission strength
somewhat to compensate for the redirected signal. The company disputes this.
Nevertheless, the net effect of using the device throughout the course of
the day may be a reduction in total exposure.

Texting, instead of talking, might be safer. “The whole trend toward texting
instead of talking on cellphones is probably a good thing,” said Mr. Slesin
at Microwave News.

That is, if you don’t rest your cellphone against your body while typing out
your message.

-- 

Name : Kimvong PEA

Educ   : BM/BPS

Tel:       016 599 599

E-mail: kimvo...@mail.com

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