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Are Cell Phones Safe?
By Linda Mason Hunter

Green Advice

Be a responsible consumer. When your cell phone has outlasted its usefulness, recycle it. More than 500 million cell phones are in landfills now, with another 125 million headed to shelves and landfills each year. Don’t throw your old cell phone away! Trade it in or donate it, instead. Try the Red Cross Collective Good program (collectivegood.com), or a no-kill animal shelter through Phones for Bones (pawasplace.org). Want to be even greener? Use a solar battery to charge your phone--$80 through solio.com.

In just a few short years mobile phones revolutionized the way people communicate. There is no disputing their convenience, but are cell phones safe? Believe it or not, no one knows for sure. Scientific evidence is inconclusive. Even manufacturers admit there is no proof that wireless phones are absolutely safe.

To understand the potential problem, it helps to understand how cell phones work. They are actually advanced versions of the walkie-talkie, which allows communication via radio frequency. But while walkie-talkies transmit messages within a short range, cell phones relay messages for miles via an elaborate network of transmitting towers (some up to 270-feet tall) positioned throughout the country. Each tower is equipped with radios, computerized switching equipment, and antennas for both receiving and transmitting radiofrequency signals.

A tower’s functional range is largely determined by surrounding geography. This service area is known as a cell. Thus, mobile phones using these transmitting towers are part of a computer-controlled cellular system and phones using this system are called cell phones.

The Question of Radio Frequency
Potential health concerns involve the nature of radio frequency (RF), a form of low-intensity microwave radiation known to generate heat in exposed tissue (a result of friction produced from highly energized molecules). Because the phone’s antenna is placed close to the earpiece, cell phones can emit active RF radiation directly into the user’s head. Ominously, in the human brain short-term memory is located near the right ear.

Research funded by the British government concluded in 1999 that there was strong evidence for adverse affects on “cognitive function, memory, and attention.” Other studies determined that RF weakens the blood/brain barrier, whose function is to prevent potentially dangerous chemicals from entering the brain.

The good news is that, so far, both short-term memory loss and weakened blood/brain barrier conditions appear to revert to normal soon after radiation exposure ends. Still, opponents voice concern that RF radiation may cause long-term damage (such as brain tumors and harmful changes to DNA), but there is no hard evidence to confirm these fears.

New Technology
Because cell phones are a relatively new technology, not enough time has elapsed to permit definitive epidemiologic studies. The U.S. Federal Communications Commission (FCC) is monitoring the problem. In 1996 it adopted new RF exposure standards for cell phones, including a maximum absorption rate (SAR) of 1.6 watts per kilogram (1.6 W/kg). All cell phones manufactured after 2000 are required to comply with this standard.

What about RF radiation created by cell-phone towers? Again, there is no hard evidence to suggest a problem exists. As with all electromagnetic radiation, power decreases rapidly as one moves away from the antenna. RF exposure on the ground is much less than exposure near the antenna in the path of a transmitted radio signal.

Make Your Cell Phone Safer
To make your cell phone safer, the FCC recommends:

  1. Don't hold prolonged conversations
  2. Select a phone designed with the antenna away from the head
  3. Use a headset and carry the phone away from your body.

If you’re still concerned, put an RF shield the back of your phone. A company called Less EMF (which sells these shields, on-line only at lessemf.com) claims RF shields reduce radiation to the brain by 99 percent.
Until more is known, play it safe and avoid living on a hill in a path between two towers. If you’re concerned about proximity of a tower near where you live or work, find out which company owns it and ask company officials to measure RF by your house, to be sure exposures do not exceed recommended limits.


 

PROJECT:
Calculate Your Ecological Footprint

 

How much space does your lifestyle require? Find out. Calculate your own ecological footprint by taking the quiz at  www.myfootprint.org. Then, you can compare your Ecological Footprint to what the planet can sustain.

Adjusting your entries or playing with the “Reduce Your Footprint” calculator will show how lifestyle changes affect the Footprint size. Enter simple goals for your life on the Action Calculator (such as a pledge to eat less meat) and find out how many acres of land you could save just by implementing that goal. Post your goals in a place where you can see and review them every day.

 
 

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IN THE ZONE

• Plastics
• Dirty Dozen
• Avoid Cosmetic
  Chems

• Wild Things
• Q&A Interview
• Near the Bone
• Rina Swentzell
• Are Cell Phones Safe?
• Living with Plastic
• Dean Wright
• Bee Mystery
• Walking on Tiptoe
• The Frugal 1950s
• ALS/Formaldehyde
• Critical Thinking
• Poo Bags
• No Bottled Water
• Windpower is Growing
• LEED for Homes

• Why Build Green?
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No More Coal
• How Green?
• Choosing Materials
• Bottled Water
• Off to See the Wizard
• 4234 Hickman
• Biomonitoring
• LEEDs the Way
• How Much is Enough?
• Beware Greenwashing
• Grandma's Recipes
• Clean Green

• Pollution Solutions
• #7 Plastics
• Seven New Sins

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