Mobile Phones Do Not Increase Brain Cancer Risk — Study Findings

Technology

There is no strong link between mobile phone use and brain cancer, according to a meta-analysis of studies conducted over the past 20 years commissioned by the World Health Organization (WHO).

Mobile Phones Do Not Increase Brain Cancer Risk — Study Findings
The research indicates that the radiation emitted by mobile phones is non-ionizing, operating at low frequencies and energy levels, which means it does not damage DNA. This makes it less dangerous compared to ionizing radiation, like medical X-rays or sunlight.

Additionally, despite the widespread use of mobile phones and other wireless technologies, the study found no significant increase in brain cancer, leukemia, or pituitary and salivary gland tumors.

Similar findings were also observed in another large study, which monitored around 250,000 individuals over seven years in Sweden, the UK, Denmark, the Netherlands, and Finland, further supporting the conclusion that mobile phones do not pose a significant brain cancer risk.

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