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Is your mobile phone damaging your brain?

August 10, 2018 By administrator

Ever since the mobile phone entered our lives in the new millenium, anxieties about its ill effects have abounded. But what do we actually know about the health risks of mobile phones?

The science on smartphones is far from settled. Brain cancer, nerve damage, and various tumors have all been touted as potential negative consequences of regular mobile phone use.

While no solid evidence has been found to prove it’s dangerous, this doesn’t mean there is no cause for concern.

What about radiation?

A lot of the concern around the health and safety risks of mobile phones centres on the radiation emitted. Mobile phones release radiofrequency energy, or radio waves, that can be absorbed by bodily tissues. In the past, studies have linked heavy mobile phone use to certain brain tumors.

But according to Martin Röösli, head of the Environmental Exposures and Health Unit at the Swiss Tropical and Public Health Institute, the type of radiation emitted by a mobile phone is nothing to be alarmed about.

It is a very low energy radio frequency radiation – the same found in TV and radio signals. “It’s a non-ionizing radiation, so it’s not radioactive or x-ray,” Röösli told DW. “No direct DNA damage can happen with this type of radiation. It’s impossible.”

As for the link between this kind of radiation and cancer, Röösli says he “does not see such indications.” Often these studies are “retrospective” and rely on people remembering their phone use, which people with tumors tend to over-report, Röösli told DW.

“We haven’t seen an increase in cancer rates in the last two decades, which you would certainly expect if there was a major risk in mobile phone use,” he added.

Likewise, Frank de Vocht, reader in Epidemiology and Public Health at the University of Bristol, told DW it’s unlikely the dangers of mobile phones have simply gone under the radar.

“If the use of mobile phones would increase the risk of something significantly like, say, cancer, this would have been picked up much more clearly with the scientific methods we have now; for example how the risks of tobacco smoking on lung cancer are straightforward to pick up.”

Wait, there’s more

But that doesn’t mean mobile phone radiation has no effect on the brain at all. Previous research has found evidence that it can change our brainwaves. And now, a new study co-authored by Röösli has found a link between mobile phone use and adverse effects on young people’s memory retention.

Swiss researchers studied 700 adolescents aged between 12 and 17; tracking their phone habits and getting them to complete memory tests. Over the course of a year participants had to fill out a questionnaire about their mobile phone habits, as well as answer questions about their psychological and physical health.

They then completed a series of computerized cognitive tests. Röösli said a unique feature of the study was the use of phone user data from mobile phone operators. That meant for every call made by the participants, the researchers “knew on which network it took place and how long it lasted.”

The study, published in Environmental Health Perspectives, found that one year’s worth of exposure to mobile phone radiation could have a negative effect on the development of memory performance in specific brain regions in adolescents. Here ‘exposure’ almost exclusively refers to phone calls.

Should we change our behavior?

Despite the negative effects they did notice, Röösli described these as “very subtle.” But if you are concerned, the scientist points out that the radiation effect “can be easily minimised” by taking calls on the left side of your head, or using loudspeaker or headphones – “especially when the network quality is low.”

“This study shows that although there is probably an effect – on memory here – it is relatively small,” De Vocht told DW. “In my opinion the most important lesson from all these studies is that the use of mobile phones is not extremely dangerous, despite what some people may say.”

What both Röösli and De Vocht are concerned about, however, is not the potential biological effects of mobile phone use, but the behavioral changes seen in heavy mobile phone users. According to them, any percievable impacts from mobile phone radiation are far less pertinent than those that change the way people behave.

“There is convincing evidence that what resembles an ‘addiction to mobile phones’ negatively affects social interaction, mental health and wellbeing,” De Vocht said.

Filed Under: News Tagged With: damaging your brain, Phone

Armenian President, U.S. Vice President speak by phone

May 20, 2016 By administrator

US VP and ArmenianYEREVAN. – President of Armenia Serzh Sargsyan and U.S. Vice President Joe Biden spoke on the phone Friday to discuss issues related to the current stage of the Nagorno-Karabakh conflict normalization.  The conversation took place upon the initiative of the American side.

The sides attached importance to the full and productive implementation of the arrangements reached upon the initiative of the foreign ministers of the OSCE Minsk Group co-chairing countries in Vienna on May 16.

They also agreed that the conflict can be resolved exclusively by peaceful means and in the framework of the efforts of the OSCE Minsk Group mediating co-chairmanship.

Filed Under: News Tagged With: Armenian President, Phone, speak, U.S, Vice President

Kerry, Lavrov Hold Phone Talks On Karabakh

April 4, 2016 By administrator

Russia -- Russian Foreign Minister Sergei Lavrov (R) greets US Secretary of State John Kerry during a meeting in Moscow, March 24, 2016

Russia — Russian Foreign Minister Sergei Lavrov (R) greets US Secretary of State John Kerry during a meeting in Moscow, March 24, 2016

US. Secretary State of State John Kerry and Russian Foreign Minister Sergey Lavrov discussed the Nagorno-Karabakh conflict in a phone call on Monday, reiterating their governments’ calls for an immediate halt to continuing hostilities there.

According to the Russian Foreign Ministry, the two men voiced “serious concern at the escalation of the confrontation” in the Armenian-Azerbaijani conflict zone.

“It was agreed that Russia, the U.S. and France, as co-chairs of the OSCE Minsk Group, will step up their efforts to foster a resolution of the Nagorno-Karabakh conflict,” read a ministry statement.

“Sergey Lavrov and John Kerry condemned attempts by certain ‘external players’ to whip up the standoff around Karabakh,” it added without elaborating.

Speaking at a news conference in Moscow earlier in the day, Lavrov warned against attempts to “undermine the role of the Minsk Group co-chairs” and seek a different format for the Karabakh negotiation process. He spoke of forces keen to “seriously complicate the settlement process” but did not name them.

Azerbaijan as well as its ally Turkey have repeatedly criticized the U.S., Russian and French mediators.

Lavrov implicitly warned the Turks against meddling in the Karabakh conflict but stopped short of blaming them for the outbreak of heavy fighting between Armenian and Azerbaijani forces. “I don’t want to judge what role Ankara has or has not played with regard to Nagorno-Karabakh,” he said. “But it would be good for everyone, including Turkey and the Turkish people, if Ankara concentrated on ending support for terrorism.”

The TASS news agency quoted Lavrov as also saying that that Russia and the two other mediating powers are making “energetic efforts” to stop the fighting along “the line of contact” around Karabakh. “These efforts will continue in order to ensure a return to the ceasefire regime,” he said.

The spokesman for Russian President Vladimir Putin said on Monday that Moscow is engaged in an “intensive dialogue” with Armenia and Azerbaijan “at the ministerial level.” The official, Dmitry Peskov, would not say whether Putin plans to host an emergency meeting of his Armenian and Azerbaijani counterparts.

“Any summit needs to be properly prepared for,” Peskov said, according to the RIA Novosti news agency.

Filed Under: News Tagged With: Karabakh, kerry, Lavrov, Phone

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