Wireless Technology Not Adequately Assessed for
Hazards to Human Health and Environment
New peer-reviewed paper presents scientific
case for revision of limits
TUCSON, AZ – October 18, 2022 – The International Commission
on the Biological Effects of Electromagnetic Fields (ICBE-EMF)
is challenging the safety of current wireless exposure limits
to radiofrequency radiation (RFR) and is calling for an
independent evaluation.
Published today in the journal Environmental
Health, “Scientific evidence
invalidates health assumptions underlying the FCC and ICNIRP
exposure limit determinations for radiofrequency radiation:
implications for 5G,” demonstrates how the U.S. Federal
Communications Commission (FCC) and the International
Commission on Nonionizing Radiation Protection (ICNIRP) have
ignored or inappropriately dismissed hundreds of scientific
studies documenting adverse health effects at exposures below
the threshold dose claimed by these agencies, which was used
to establish human exposure limits. The authors argue that the
threshold, based on science from the 1980s – before cell
phones were ubiquitous -- is wrong, and these exposure limits
based on this threshold do not adequately protect workers,
children, people with electromagnetic hypersensitivity, and
the public from exposure to the nonionizing radiation from
wireless data transmission.
“Many studies have demonstrated oxidative effects associated
with exposure to low-intensity RFR, and significant adverse
effects including cardiomyopathy, carcinogenicity, DNA
damage, neurological disorders, increased permeability of the
blood-brain barrier, and sperm damage,” explains Dr.
Ronald Melnick, Commission chair and a former senior
toxicologist with the U.S. National Toxicology Program at the
National Institute of Environmental Health Sciences. “These
effects need to be addressed in revised and health-protective
exposure guidelines. Furthermore, the assumption that 5G
millimeter waves are safe because of limited penetration into
the body does not dismiss the need for health effects
studies.”
Dr. Lennart Hardell, former professor at
Örebro University Hospital in Sweden and author of more than
100 papers on non-ionizing radiation, added, “Multiple robust
human studies of cell phone radiation have found increased
risks for brain tumors, and these are supported by clear
evidence of carcinogenicity of the same cell types found in
animal studies.”
The Commission believes that an independent evaluation based
on the scientific evidence with attention to the knowledge
gained over the past 25 years is needed to establish lower
exposure limits. The Commission is also calling for health
studies to be completed prior to any future deployment of 5G
networks.
Elizabeth Kelley, the Commission's managing
director, noted that “ICBE-EMF was commissioned by the
advisors to the International
EMF Scientist Appeal, a petition signed by more
than 240 scientists who have published over 2,000 papers on
EMF, biology, and health, and that “The commissioners have
endorsed the Appeal’s recommendations to protect public and
environmental health.”
For
background on the paper and its co-authors see:
Media contact:
Joel M. Moskowitz, PhD
--
Key points
- ICBE-EMF
scientists report that exposure limits for radiofrequency (or
wireless) radiation set by ICNIRP and the
FCC are based on invalid assumptions and outdated
science, and are not protective of human health
and wildlife.
- ICBE-EMF
calls for an independent assessment
of the effects and risks of radiofrequency
radiation based on scientific evidence from
peer-reviewed studies conducted over the past 25
years. The aim of such assessment would be to
establish health protective exposure standards for
workers and the public.
- The public
should be informed of the health risks of wireless radiation
and encouraged to take precautions to minimize
exposures, especially for children, pregnant women
and people who are electromagnetically
hypersensitive.
- ICBE-EMF calls
for an immediate moratorium on further rollout of
5G wireless technologies until safety is
demonstrated and not simply assumed.
--
International Commission on the
Biological Effects of Electromagnetic Fields. Scientific
evidence invalidates health assumptions underlying the FCC
and ICNIRP exposure limit determinations for
radiofrequency radiation: implications for 5G. Environmental Health. (2022) 21:92. doi.org:10.1186/s12940-022-00900-9.
Abstract
In the late-1990s, the FCC
and ICNIRP adopted radiofrequency radiation (RFR) exposure
limits to protect the public and workers from adverse
effects of RFR. These limits were based on results from
behavioral studies conducted in the 1980s involving
40–60-minute exposures in 5 monkeys and 8 rats, and then
applying arbitrary safety factors to an apparent threshold
specific absorption rate (SAR) of 4 W/kg. The limits were
also based on two major assumptions: any biological effects
were due to excessive tissue heating and no effects would
occur below the putative threshold SAR, as well as twelve
assumptions that were not specified by either the FCC or
ICNIRP. In this paper, we show how the past 25 years of
extensive research on RFR demonstrates that the assumptions
underlying the FCC’s and ICNIRP’s exposure limits are
invalid and continue to present a public health harm.
Adverse effects observed at exposures below the assumed
threshold SAR include non-thermal induction of reactive
oxygen species, DNA damage, cardiomyopathy, carcinogenicity,
sperm damage, and neurological effects, including
electromagnetic hypersensitivity. Also, multiple human
studies have found statistically significant associations
between RFR exposure and increased brain and thyroid cancer
risk. Yet, in 2020, and in light of the body of evidence
reviewed in this article, the FCC and ICNIRP reaffirmed the
same limits that were established in the 1990s.
Consequently, these exposure limits, which are based on
false suppositions, do not adequately protect workers,
children, hypersensitive individuals, and the general
population from short-term or long-term RFR exposures. Thus,
urgently needed are health protective exposure limits for
humans and the environment. These limits must be based on
scientific evidence rather than on erroneous assumptions,
especially given the increasing worldwide exposures of
people and the environment to RFR, including novel forms of
radiation from 5G telecommunications for which there are no
adequate health effects studies.
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