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Contrary to previous assumptions, hands-free mobile phone
kits can significantly boost the
brain's exposure to radiation, according to new
research conducted by British consumer research magazine Which?
The new findings confirmed claims that the magazine first
published in April that using hands-free earpieces could
more than triple the brain's exposure to radiation compared
to a conventional mobile phone call. That original report
was dismissed in August by the British government, which commissioned
research that showed the kits did cut exposure levels.
The independent lab conducting the test took thousands of
measurements to explore what was causing the changes in EMF
emissions. It found that one critical factor was the distance
between the top of the phone's aerial and the ear.
But consumer magazine said the methodology used in the government
research was flawed. They found that the shape of the test
rig used in the government tests made it impossible to get
the hands-free kit wire into the position that gave the highest
readings. According to the report:
We have found two possible explanations for this. First,
the design of the SAR test rig doesn't replicate how someone
would normally use a hands-free kit. Most importantly, the
wire couldn't hang down straight - as it did when we took
the highest readings in our other tests. Second, we found
that the SAR test system looks for the point in the head
where there is the highest level of radiation - and gives
a final reading for only this area. But we found that kits
and phones emit the highest levels of radiation in different
places: kits emit most at the ear; phones emit most at the
user's jaw and cheek.
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The level of emissions depended on the distance between
the tip of the phone's aerial and the earpiece, which
varied according to how the phone was held. The government
tests did not allow for this, Which?
said.
According to the magazine's editor:
... it's clear that consumers can't rely on hands-free
kits to reduce radiation emissions at the brain from mobile
phones. Although these kits can reduce radiation, they
can also increase it significantly, depending on where you
position the phone and kit. Unfortunately, there is no way
that consumers can work out the best position to reduce
radiation.
Scientists agree that electromagnetic radiation from mobile
phones warms brain tissue, some strains of mice have developed
cancer in tests in Australia and Finland and that others become
disorientated.
One reason that the government's tests did not show this
increased exposure is that they used only one position which
did not allow the wire to hang straight down, Which?
said.
Not surprisingly, mobile phone maker Ericsson played down
the new findings in a public statement.
Which? said it was impossible
to recommend a "safe" position for holding a phone.
Both short and long distances between the aerial and the earpiece
produced increased emissions, with only a short length in
the middle generating lower emissions than conventional mobile
phone calls. They recommend that "if you're concerned,
the most important safety-first advice is to keep the number
and duration of calls to a minimum, whether you use a phone
with or without a hands-free kit."
To see the original report from Which? CLICK
HERE
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