Conflicting Viewpoints: Cell Phone Radiation
Is cell phone usage safe? The FCC has said that cell phone radiation is not harmful to humans. However, studies have shown that it does have an effect, especially on the brain and even on children and babies developing in the womb (Gandhi, Morgan, de Salles et al., 2012). My position is that cell phone radiation can be dangerous and that more studies should be done to focus on the problems of cell phone radiation. I chose this topic because I have always suspected that cell phone radiation was harmful and I wanted to look more closely at what researchers have said on the topic.
Two opposing views to my position are: 1) cell phone radiation is not harmful, as the FCC has demonstrated in its research on the subject, and 2) there are too many other variables that factor into how a person’s body develops and/or changes over time; to say that brain cancer or childhood defects are solely the cause of cell phone radiation (if at all) is to assume too much and ignore the myriad other factors that could account for defects or cancer development. My view is that there is plenty of evidence to show that cell phone radiation is indeed dangerous and harmful and that the FCC is not an impartial critic in this matter, and that those who say harm cannot be directly linked to cell phone radiation are actually the ones ignoring the facts.
First of all, Nylund and Leszczynski (2006) have clearly...
References
Gandhi, O. P., Morgan, L. L., de Salles, A. A., Han, Y. Y., Herberman, R. B., & Davis,
D. L. (2012). Exposure limits: the underestimation of absorbed cell phone radiation, especially in children. Electromagnetic Biology and Medicine, 31(1), 34-51.
Kesari, K. K., Siddiqui, M., Meena, R., Verma, H. N., & Kumar, S. (2013). Cell phone
exposure on brain and associated biological systems. IJEB, 51(3).
Nylund, R., & Leszczynski, D. (2006). Mobile phone radiation causes changes in gene
and protein expression in human endothelial cell lines and the response seems to be genome?and proteome?dependent. Proteomics, 6(17), 4769-4780.
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