Thursday, October 23, 2008

MP urges ban on Wi-Fi technolgy in schools



Nov 21 2006 Sam Burson, Western Mail

WIRELESS computer networks should be banned from the nation's classrooms because of fears about their effects on health, it was claimed last night.

Adam Price MP said Wales should follow the lead of Canada, where schools no longer used microwave signals to link computer terminals and laptops.

He has backed one school in his Carmarthenshire constituency which has removed the technology. Parents with children at Ysgol Pantycelyn, Llandovery, warn there is not enough awareness about the possible dangers.

Although exact numbers are unclear, increasing numbers of schools have been installing transmitters in classrooms, which allow pupils to have wireless access to the faculty's computer network, email and the internet.

But there are concerns the microwave radiation coming from the transmitters, as with mobile phone masts, could be harmful, especially to younger children.

Some symptoms reported include loss of concentration, headaches, fatigue, memory and behavioural problems and there are even worries over cancer in the longer term.

Some experts believe children are more vulnerable to the radiation because of their thinner skulls and the fact their brains and nervous systems are still developing.

Mr Price said, "The science isn't clear, but it comes down to the precautionary principle, especially with children, because they're still in development.

"The long-term effect is not known because it's still fairly new, which is why the technology has been banned in schools in Canada."

He said he would back a similar ban in Wales, adding, "I don't think it's just a media-driven health fear or panic. There's a basis to have a look at more studies."

The technology in Ysgol Pantycelyn was quickly switched off after pressure from parents made it clear there was a great deal of unease over the possible health effects of the wi-fi terminals.

Hywel Pugh, headmaster of the school, said, "The whole school was hard-wired anyway, but one or two areas were causing us a bit of concern, so we put in the wi-fi connections over a trial period.

"But it raised concerns among parents. Some were worried it could have an effect on younger children. We listened to the concerns and then decided to find other ways to get around the problem.

"Wi-fi wasn't essential, so we decided to switch it off as a precautionary measure.

"We'd have a review of that policy if we ever had a situation where wi-fi became essential, but would not go ahead without consulting parents."

The school had already banned mobile phones from being used by children, although Mr Pugh said that measure was for reasons of discipline, rather than health.

Judith Davies, who has a 15-year-old daughter going to the school, said, "There's a lot of parents who don't know about the risks involved with this technology.

"There have been outcries over mobile phone masts even near schools, but this technology gives out the same kind of radiation, and it's inside the school. It's at least as serious, if not more serious.

"You can switch off wi-fi at home if it's making you feel unwell, but it's more of a problem in a school. There's no reason for it to be in schools where there is already cable."

A recent report by Professor Sir William Stewart, who chairs the Health Protection Agency, said evidence of potentially harmful effects of microwave radiation had become more persuasive over the past five years. It advised a precautionary approach, although conceded there was a lack of hard evidence of health damage.

Carmarthenshire County Council said it was up to individual schools' governing bodies to decide whether to use wi-fi.

Letter By Dr. Gerd Oberfeld MD on Wireless in Schools and Kindergardens

DAS LAND IM INTERNET: www.salzburg.gv.at
AMT DER SALZBURGER LANDESREGIERUNG • ABTEILUNG 9: GESUNDHEITSWESEN UND LANDESANSTALTEN
 POSTFACH 527, 5010 SALZBURG • TEL (0662) 8042-0* • FAX (0662) 8042-2160 • MAIL post@salzburg.gv.at • DVR 0078182
GESUNDHEIT, HYGIENE UND UMWELTMEDIZIN

To whom it may concern

ZAHL DATUM PFEIFERGASSE 3
9/11-62603-743/2005 December, 5th 2005  POSTFACH 527, 5010 SALZBURG
BETREFF TEL (0662) 8042 - 2969

WLAN and DECT in Schools and Kindergardens
FAX (0662) 8042 - 3056
geshyg@salzburg.gv.at

Dear Governor/Head Teacher/Concerned Parent,

I was kindly asked by some parents to inform you about health effects from WLAN Networks in schools. I will do this in a very short summary.

WLAN antennas are emitting microwave radiation in the frequency range 2400-2485MHz - it is the same as used by microwave ovens. The pulses change their amplitude 10 times per second in stand by (10 Hz) with a very sharp rise. The exposure depends on the distance to the antenna which could be very small in the case of antennas build in the notebook.

Despite the widespread use of WLAN there are no studies available on short-or long-term effects from WLAN exposures. Based on first empirical evidence from sensitive people the signal seems to be very "biologically active". The symptoms seen so far are the same seen in base station studies: headaches, concentration difficulty, restlessness, memory problems etc.

The official advice of the Public Health Department of the Salzburg Region is not to use WLAN and DECT in Schools or Kindergardens.

Best regards
Dr. Gerd Oberfeld MD
Salzburg Region
Public Health Department

Wireless computer networks (WLAN) and other microwave emitting devices



Although people are aware of the controversy surrounding phone masts, fewer people are aware that the same problems will occur with any microwave emitting device. Such devices include wireless computers, WLAN, WiFi, WIMAX, burglar alarms with microwave detectors, wireless interactive whiteboards, DECT (digital cordless) phones, cordless digital baby monitors etc.

Radiation is continuously emitted from these devices in the same way that it is emitted from a mobile phone mast. It appears to cause damage to the immune system leading to cancer and all sorts of other diseases including short term effects of hyperactivity, concentration difficulties, headaches, nose bleeds and sleep disorders.

Schools

There is a huge drive by OFSTED to put computers in every classroom and integrate them into all lessons.

" Almost all schools are now connected to the internet with the proportion with broadband connections having risen from 68% in 2002 to 90%. Many schools have benefited from more flexible deployment of resources, for example through the use of laptops wirelessly linked to school networks and clusters of machines in various curriculum areas around the school. This has enabled more use of ICT to take place in other subjects across the curriculum. " Ofsted

With the U.K Department for Eductation encouraging school's to provide computers for students use, many schools are finding that wireless network connections are a cost effective and in some cases the only solution to providing computer data points.

Warnings

Although not specifically mentioned in the UK government's Stewart Report, Stewart warned against masts being near schools. In January 2005 in an interview with the Daily Telegraph Sir William said that he is ‘now more worried than he was 5 years ago' and that he ‘did not want to see masts near schools'.

The Public Health Dept of Salzburg has specifically warned that WLAN and DECT (digital cordless phone) should not be put in schools and nurseries.

The German doctors appeal, the Bamburger appeal also now includes a warning about WLAN.

The German equivalent of the HPA have just put out a soft warning on DECT phones.

The German teachers union has told its members to resist the roll out of WLAN into schools in Germany on safety grounds.

Lakehead University in Canada has decided not to put in wireless computers as the technology they use has never been tested and so not proved to be safe.

The Vienna Chamber of Doctors has warned that WLAN emits high levels of radiation.

Although generally EMF levels for wireless LAN devices are lower than mobile phones, there seems to exist less public awareness of the health issues for wireless LAN devices than there is for mobile phones.

Wireless LANs work by setting up microwave communication, in narrow frequency bands around 2.4 and 5.8 GHz, depending on the protocol that is used ( WiFi , WiMax , OFDM , etc).

The system is comprised of a base station (called access point , or AP) which establishes point-to-multipoint communication with a number of subscriber units or SUs, to which client computers are connected. Both devices are bidirectional and have antennas that emit at a certain RF power. Thus in effect all the computers connected to the wireless network and the wireless base station are a mini 'mast'.

There have already been schools across the U.K affected by this issue:

Prebendal School, Chichester, West Sussex has removed its wireless network after lobbying by concerned parents.

Ysgol Pantycelyn, in Carmarthenshire, Wales. Has switched of its wireless network due to parents and governors concerns.

Stowe School, a Buckinghamshire private boarding school, removed part of its wireless network after a teacher became ill.

We are calling for a re-think of the current trend to adopt wireless networks and devices over traditional wired ones until further research is made available on its potential health affects. We would urge all wireless computer owners whether in schools, offices, homes etc. to reconsider or limit usage especially around children.

Link to article:
http://www.radiationresearch.org/wireless.htm

Wi-Fi: Better Safe Than Sorry


SM Mohamed Idris | Sep 26, 08 5:03pm

There is sound basis for our call, which we hope the Penang state government will heed, in the name of public health. CAP is an independent, non-profit and non-politically affiliated body that has only the interests of consumers in mind, so there is no hidden agenda for the above call as implied by the writer. The following facts are self-explanatory.

Wi-fi, like mobile phones, is an untested technology, meaning that it hasn’t yet been proven safe for use. Wi-Fi operates in a way very similar to mobile phones which should be of concern, as it is now believed that the universal use of mobile phones may be storing up medical catastrophes for the future.

Like mobile phones and their towers (or masts), Wi-Fi also emits microwave radiation. Though virtually no research has been carried out, public health advocates and some scientists expect them to have similar ill-effects. It is reported that we are all now living in a soup of electromagnetic radiation (EMR) one billion times stronger than the natural fields in which living cells have developed over the last 3.8 billion years.

At current exposure levels, microwave radiation is already questionable, prompting the German government to warn its people to avoid mobile phone and Wi-Fi use. The world’s top experts have also advised caution in recent years.

The latest scientific opinion on electromagnetic fields a 610-page Bioinitiative Report written by 14 scientists, public health and public policy experts, and reviewed by a dozen others, which represents a strong comprehensive review of EMR science, perhaps the most precise done to date has concluded that existing public safety standards for microwave radiation in nearly every country of the world are “thousands of times too lenient”.

In September 2006, more than 30 scientists from all over the world collectively stated in the Benevento Resolution (issued by the International Commission on Electromagnetic Safety) that: “There is evidence for adverse health effects, including cancer and electro-hypersensitivity, from microwave radiation at current exposure levels, and that a precautionary approach should be adopted”.

It is thus important to take a precautionary approach until more is understood about possible health impacts of wireless technology.

Absence of conclusive studies should not prevent reasonable efforts by the powers that be in our country to respond to the information at hand, as has been done overseas.

In Germany, the government in 2007, warned its citizens to avoid using Wi-Fi. The ruling was on the basis that a possible risk has not been ruled out, rather than because an actual threat has been determined. It recommends avoiding exposure to wi-fi “because it is a new technology and all the research into its health effects has not yet been carried out”.

The German action, the most damning made by any government on the fast-growing technology, is a stark contrast to the unhesitating promotion of the technology by the Penang state government.

The state government should be informing citizens of and protecting them from the Wi-Fi health risks, not arbitrarily imposing this hazardous technology on them. This new technology may be liberating, but it does not warrant the increase in radiation and the potential risks to the health of Penangites.

At a time when governments around the world are beginning to question the safety of wireless technology, Penang is hastily embracing it to the future detriment of her people. This is not only totally unacceptable, but also highly irresponsible on the state government’s part.

In the present EMF research climate, a move in the right direction is to have say, mobile phone-free zones for starters, followed by Wi-Fi free zones, if the state government is truly committed to protecting people’s health. Instead, Penangites are pushed into accepting a Wi-Fi dominated environment with the recent state decision.

Adoption of Wi-Fi technology may appear to be a positive global trend today, but from a public health standpoint, its use has now gone out of control worldwide. It is a grave mistake to see wi-fi technology as a craze worth emulating as the trend now is towards increasing international concern. It is also a social injustice to involuntarily expose all Penangites to its potentially serious health threats with its free implementation statewide.

In the light of present evidence, CAP also calls on the Malaysian authorities in general to be vigilant over the public’s exposure to electromagnetic radiation from rapidly expanding new technologies throughout the country and implement measures to reduce exposures, especially to vulnerable groups, such as children.

As for the Penang state government, it should place people’s health above other interests. In the interest of all, CAP calls on the state government to find alternatives that do not pose the same level of possible health risks as Wi-Fi, while there is still time to make changes.

The writer is president of the Consumers’Association of Penang

Wednesday, October 22, 2008

無線上網要「小心」?


東方日報記者房翠瑩報導

日前檳城州政府宣佈推行「檳州無線」計劃,預計在未來18至24個月內,完成州內的WiFi免費無線上網建設。然而,此舉引起檳城消費人協會及環保團體的反彈,他們提出,無線上網所產生的電磁輻射,會製造一層籠罩檳城的「無線網絡濃霧」,擔心會危害人民的健康。

究竟我國無線上網使用狀況如何?無線上網的運用,能帶來甚麼便利?在有線網路普及並不理想的大馬,是否就應該「冒險」佈建無線上網?

本週二本報(东方日报)在愛FM電台的《愛談天下事.開講東方議題》節目上,探討「無線上網要『小心』?」這個課題時,就引起了聽眾的熱烈迴響。

無線上網隱藏輻射擔憂

「WiMAX等無線上網其實仍處於研發階段,多國如印度、俄羅斯、韓國等還在試驗其可行性。」提及大馬正積極推行的無線上網,台灣電磁輻射公害防治協會理事長陳椒華,挼受本報越洋專訪時如此表示。

她還建議:「大馬可再等待一陣子,參考這些國家的試驗結果,再做決定也不遲。」

台灣政府正如火如荼發展WiMAX產業,但在民間已醞釀一股力量,試圖抗爭此政策,台灣電磁輻射公害防治協會是走在最前線的組織。

陳椒華認為,現在無線上網的設備昂貴,且還不能確定其適用性,大馬不必急於一時,以免成為「試驗品」。

2000年,我國網民有370萬人;在今年308大選期間,據稱已劇增至1500萬人。近年來,面對網路使用的龐大需求,吉隆坡、檳城、怡保、新山等城市,先後要推行無線上網計劃。

今年8月底,吉隆坡市政局、大馬通訊及多媒體委員會,與P1網絡公司簽署了備忘錄,計劃把吉隆坡打造成世界級的無線網絡城,將在商業中心、辦公大樓、公共場所及社區安裝WiMAX設備,且會在2009年前把覆蓋率擴大至80%,並提供2年免費無線上網服務。

此外,2008年底前,WiMAX服務將延展至雪蘭莪州的八打靈再也、巴生等,甚至日後到檳城、柔佛新山、吉打、霹靂、森美蘭、馬六甲的各大城鎮。

協助提高生產力

一般認為,一旦具備完善的無線上網設備,民眾將可隨時隨地利用手提電腦、手機、掌上型數碼記事本(PDA)等上網,推動「無紙化」運作,並促成「電子政府」、「電子校園」等。

對於無線上網的便利性,我國新紀元學院資訊工藝系副主任林志高大表認同。他在《愛談天下事.開講東方議題》節目中指出,無線上網在很多方面都協助社會成長,如任何地方都可以辦公,不需要遷就地點,提高生產力。

「過去的網絡情況是,公司有多少人就準備多少條網絡線,需要加線很麻煩,無線上網就沒有這個問題,且對辦公室的佈局更有利,不需要遷就網絡線。」

日前檳城首席部長林冠英推介「檳州無線」計劃,以在未來1 8至2 4個月內,完成州內的WiFi免費無線上網建設。屆時檳州將全面提供免費寬頻服務,改寫僅在城市或小社區提供無線上網的限制局面,寫下創舉。

檳州無線網絡熱點共有750個。檳城WiFi免費無線上網只是「檳州無線」計劃的首個部分,州政府接著在本週四再推展了「檳州WiMAX」付費無線上網服務,以迎合戶外網絡用戶需要高速頻寬的需求。

能源、通訊及水源部長沙茲曼表示,政府對現有的光纖(FTTH)、WiMAX等技術深具信心,並認為我國能在2010年達到50%的無線上網覆蓋率。

因可解決「最後一里」和實體線路佈建所需耗費的龐大成本,WiMAX普遍上被認為適用於幅員廣闊,且缺乏有線網絡佈建的發展中國家。

但在台灣推動電磁輻射公害防治的陳椒華卻始終認為:「既然吉隆坡等的大馬各大城市,已具備基本的有線網絡設備,而無線上網對民眾健康的威脅『非同小可』,大馬對於無線上網的推廣,需要再評估。」

無線上網真的只會帶來無窮好處嗎?記者日前就在一份報章,看到一篇題為「無線上網無限利益」的文章;並且,在一篇檳城首席部長林冠英的活動報導中,看到他誓言,除了要讓檳州成為我國首個「無線網絡州屬」,同時也要致力成為「綠化州屬」。

從以上所述,都再再說明了國人對無線網絡「可能」帶來的健康威脅及負面影響,缺乏明確的認知。無線上網若真的對人體健康有威脅,是會如何危害?一般認為,長期暴露在電磁輻射下,對人體就可能有相當危險性,但是「長期」約為多久?若非得要無線上網,可有一天的上網時限?

瞭解疑慮 安心上網

「越來越多證據說明,一些人在暴露於電磁輻射下,出現頭疼、胸口痛、噁心、眩暈、耳鳴、心悸、心律不整、健忘、疲勞、失眠、皮膚起紅疹、對光產生敏感等症狀。」檳城消費人協會表示,這種病症稱為「電敏感反應」或「電過度敏感反應」。

據世界衛生組織估計, 全球有1.5%至3%人口是有電過度敏感反應的。更有大學教授表示,輻射可殺死腦細胞,且會形成「電子毒霧」。

研究人員辛帝賽居強調,只要離開無線電波的磁場或輻射源,「電敏感反應」就會獲得改善。

台灣電磁輻射公害防治協會理事長陳椒華受訪時向本報指出, 無線網絡透過電磁波傳遞,會對人體造成荷爾蒙降低,並影響基因的正常表現。

「調查顯示, 住在基地台附近的民眾較易疲倦、不快樂,現今社會憂鬱症那麼普遍,是否與環境中電磁波含量越來越高有關?」

她表示,無線上網用戶實則暴露在雙重的電磁波下。

首先是基地台發射出的電磁波,再來是使用無線上網時,電腦本身產生的電磁波。一般人上網的時間少則半小時,長則數小時,加上近距離接觸電腦,久而久之,後果可想而知。

無線上網時間越短越好

陳椒華透露,手機使用最好每次不超過3分鐘,接聽手機間隔不少過30分鐘。雖然現在對每天無線上網的時限,並無一個安全標準,但無線上網與手機所產生的電波屬同一頻率,建議的手機使用時限尚且如此短,持續無線上網的時間當然越短越好。

「若每天需長時間上網,最好使用有線上網。」她如此奉勸網民。

至於長期暴露在電磁輻射下,恐會造成健康隱憂的「長期」為多久?她正色指出,根據國外報告,住在基地台附近超過5至10年,癌症罹患率可能大大提升。

「我本身就被無線上網害慘了。」她向本報分享自己的親身經歷,早前對無線上網的「威力」懵然不知,因購買電腦時附贈小型基地台(AP),而成為無線上網用戶,沒想到使用4年後就發現胸部長腫瘤。

根據知名的遺傳學家、生物物理學家兼英國科學的社會功能研究會主任何美雲博士指出,無線微波的危險性,若不超過抽煙,也至少和抽煙一樣。抽煙是自覺的,而暴露於微波下是被動的和非自願的。

「當到處都是無線網絡時,就無人可倖免了。」

辛帝賽居的研究也顯示,因兒童正在成長,細胞轉換比大人快,所以他們對於長期暴露於電磁場,即使是低量的,也會特別敏感,最終也許會形成白血病。

因此,檳城消費人協會呼籲停止進行「檳城免費無線網絡」計劃,一直到州政府能證明它是安全為止。

「州政府不應把一種還沒證實是安全的技術,強加在居民身上,使他們無法避開此計劃所產生的電磁輻射。」

對此,陳椒華建議,民眾可購買電磁波檢測器。「雖然它不是百分百準確,但對於住家或辦公室附近有無電磁波,可給予初步判斷。」

槟州不应推行“槟城免费无线网络”计划




槟城消费人协会担心,最近推展的“槟城免费无线网络”(Wi-Fi)计划可能影响槟城人民的健康。

这个计划将制造一层笼罩槟城的“无线网络浓雾”。这个"浓雾"包围整个槟城;没有人可幸免于它的影响

槟城的无线网络通讯塔和天线杆将会增加。它们已经令附近的居民担心健康受影响。更多的塔和杆将更增添他们的忧虑。

无线网络和手机的运作非常相似,都是运作在微波900兆赫至2.4千兆赫的频谱内。它们是为避免使用电线连接而专门设计的。

根据知名的遗传学家、生物物理学家兼英国科学的社会功能研究会主任何美云博士说,已经有证据说明一些健康问题和无线微波有关系。它的危险性,若不超过抽烟,也至少和它一样。和抽烟不同,暴露于微波下是被动的和非自愿的。当到处都是无线网络的时候,就无人可幸免了。

英国手机通讯与健康研究计划的主席劳利·查里斯教授,曾经警告说,应该监控无线网络对儿童的影响。他说,在还没有做更多研究之前, 儿童和含无线网络天线的笔记本电脑,应该保持一个安全距离。

此外,也有越来越多的证据说明,一些人在暴露于电磁辐射下,出现了痛苦的症状。这种病症称为电敏感反应或电过度敏感反应。

在瑞典,这种残疾的病患,已登记的有 285,000 人。估计患这种敏感症的人高达它的人口的 5 %。据世卫组织估计,有 1.5-3 %人口是有电过度敏感反应的。

澳洲,萨尔堡地方政府警告学校不得安装无线网络。同样的,英国的许多学校已经拆除了它们的无线网络。

加拿大安大略的洛希德大学有 7,400 位学生。它把无线网络设备拆除了,因为副校长要求,必须要有决定性的证据证明这种技术是安全的。在安大略大学,无线网络受限制使用;只能用在光纤没接到的地区。

槟消协建议停止进行“槟城免费无线网络”计划,一直到州政府能证明它是安全的为止。州政府不应把一种还没证实是安全的技术,强加在居民身上,使他们无法避开此计划所产生的电磁辐射。

州政府对此事应该采取预防性的态度,停止这项可能影响槟城人民健康的计划。

Tuesday, October 21, 2008

The WiFi Blues

by Jeffrey Fawcett

Wireless broadband Internet access is all the rage. The noise is drowning out concerns for this technology's risks.

Philadelphia, the city of brotherly love is going to have it; many in San Francisco want it: wireless broadband Internet access (WiFi)(1)seems too good to be true. At relatively low cost, anyone can get on the Internet anywhere in a city. All the city needs to do is install a network of WiFi antennas. An often-repeated argument in favor of citywide WiFi is that it will help close the digital divide, since the poorer you are, the more limited your access to the Internet and its wealth of
information resources. Cities like Philadelphia and San Francisco are actively trying to close the digital gap. One option is WiFi.

Yet, in weighing the options, virtually nothing is heard about the potential health risks. Saturating an entire city with WiFi adds to the existing burden of radio frequency radiation (RFR). That burden, called electrosmog(2)by some, consists of long-term, low-level exposure to non-ionizing electromagnetic radiation in the radio frequency and microwave range from familiar sources like radio and TV broadcast signals, radar, and the ubiquitous cell phone. Health Risks Henry Lai, PhD, has been researching the biological and health effects of RFR for 35 years. His
research focuses on the effects of RFR in the range used by cell phones and other wireless technologies. His laboratory at the University of Washington in Seattle is the single remaining lab in the US that conducts such research. Ten years ago, Dr. Lai's laboratory was one of four.

There is no funding in the United States for research of the biological and health effects of RFR and electromagnetic fields (EMF). No foundation, government agency, or corporation will lay down money to help clarify the science behind concerns about WiFi, cell phones, and other wireless devices. Dr. Lai keeps his lab going by doing cancer research, some of it concerning the use of electromagnetic radiation to treat cancer.

In Europe, there are many well-funded projects in RFR research. Citizens are more organized. Public figures have championed the issue. And the European Union has a much greater public health orientation than the United States. These days we have to rely on the Europeans for the science of wireless technology health risks.3

It was not always so. For example, in the early 1990s, the Cellular Telecommunications and Internet Association (CTIA) came up with $25 million for research into the potential health effects of cell phones. The CTIA is the cell phone industry's trade organization. Their intention was to lay concerns about cell phones to rest. The Wireless Technology Research (WTR) program administered the funds and research program. When the $25 million was spent, the WTR final
report submitted in 2000 recommended further study. The CTIA cut a deal with the Food and Drug Administration (FDA) to spend another $1 million to review further research.4

The money is still there. The FDA has been waiting since 1999 when the deal with CTIA was cut to spend the money. According to the FDA website, "the FDA plans to convene a meeting in the near future to evaluate all completed, ongoing, and planned research, looking at health effects associated with the use of wireless communication devices, and to identify knowledge gaps that may warrant additional research."5

Initially, the WTR found no cause for concern. But in 1995, Dr. Lai and his colleague NP Singh, PhD, found that exposing the brain cells of rats to RFR at a level similar to cell phones produced breaks in strands of DNA. Their discovery was a turning point in the research and in the CTIA's enthusiasm for the project. Dr. Lai and Dr. Singh had uncovered a mechanism that explained how RFR exposure might cause health effects.6

Since 1990, Dr. Lai has maintained a database of research on the effects of RFR on humans, lab animals, and cell cultures. He has amassed over 300 studies published in peer-reviewed scientific journals. To avoid bias, he excludes his own research from the database. Of these studies, 56% show a biological or health effect(7)
from exposure to RFR. These effects include the
following:
• cancer;(8)

• genetic effects, such as to DNA;(9)

• cellular and molecular effects, such as reduction in enzymes critical to the
central nervous system;(10)

• changes in electrophysiology, such as reduced activity between nerve cells;11

and
• physiological and behavioral changes, such as impairment of peripheral vision.(12)

Biased Research?

An interesting thing happens when the studies from Dr. Lai's database are placed in two stacks: one stack containing studies funded by the wireless industry (30% of the studies), the other stack of independently funded studies (70%). Of the studies that show a biological or health effect from wireless RFR, 14% are industry-funded, while 86% are independently funded. Of studies showing no effect, 49% are industry-funded, while 51% are independently funded.

To make the point another way, of industry-funded studies, only 27% found an RFR effect. Independently funded studies found an RFR effect 68% of the time. This discrepancy is consistent among the effects listed. Of studies that found an effect on cancer, 11% were industry-funded; 47% were independently funded. Cellular and molecular effects: 19% industry, 69% independent. Electrophysiology effects: 33% industry, 77% independent. Physiological and behavioral effects: 57% industry, 83% independent.

If Dr. Lai's research were included in the tally, the percent of studies showing an effect from RFR would be even greater. But when Dr. Lai is asked about these statistics, he often says that 50% of the studies show an effect. And then he points out that 50% is a significant number, significant enough to justify a precautionary approach that minimizes exposures.

The differences between the industry-funded stack of studies and the independently funded stack suggest bias. Bias enters research through the way a study is designed, the methods used in the study, how data is collected, and how results are interpreted. It might be that some independently funded researchers are biased because they are consumed by a burning passion to eliminate RFR exposures or, even more sinister, destroy the wireless industry. They might have consciously or unconsciously designed their studies, chosen methods, collected data, and interpreted the results to show health effects from RFR. However, the rewards for doing so are not great. Many researchers who advise precaution regarding RFR have been ostracized, or their research funding has been slashed. Careers have been stalled and, in some cases, terminated hardly circumstances that would encourage jumping on that particular bandwagon.(13)

The rewards for producing industry-friendly results are obvious: funding, professional recognition, a clear career path, and employment opportunities in industry. This is not to say that these researchers are dishonest. It is to say that rewards are more likely as a consequence of producing the "right" answers. In other words, researchers typically aren't corrupted into conducting biased research. More often they're already biased, and the rewards flow to them as a consequence.(14)

Within each group, whether industry- or independently funded, results don't always agree some studies show an effect, while others do not, regardless of who did the funding. That difference suggests another kind of problem: scientists don't know enough yet to conduct decisive experiments that can produce something like a professional consensus regarding the biological and health effects of wireless RFR. Many of the scientists who work in this field and who believe that there's ample reason for concern will say that the science is not yet conclusive.(15)

This drives some activists crazy. Yet it is a true statement about the state of the science.

We should not be surprised that this lack of conclusive science has led the wireless industry to claim that cell phones and other wireless technologies are safe. The FDA is with them, stating that "[t]he available scientific evidence does not show that any health problems are associated with using wireless phones. There is no proof, however, that wireless phones are absolutely safe."(16)

This carefully constructed statement is intended to reassure us. Yet Dr. Lai's database puts the lie to the first sentence: it's simply false. The framework set up for us is that a technology should be adopted, unless there's conclusive evidence that it does harm. Not all regulatory agencies think this way.

The UK's equivalent to the FDA, the Health Protection Agency (HPA), has declared a voluntary moratorium on marketing cell phones to children as a precautionary measure.
(17)

The moratorium has so far been observed by the UK cell phone industry. The HPA opens its discussion of the health risks from cell phones with the following statement:

There is a large body of scientific evidence relating to exposure to radio waves, and there are thousands of published scientific papers covering studies of exposed tissue samples (e.g., cells), animals, and people. It is not difficult to find contradictory results in the literature, and an important role of the HPA Radiological Protection Division (RPD) is to develop judgments on the
totality of the evidence in controversial areas of the science.(18)

Unlike the FDA, the HPA points to contra-dictory science regarding cell phone radiation. The reassurance is that they're paying attention, not that cell phones very likely don't cause harm. The HPA goes on to cite the National Radiological Protection Board (NRPB), which reviews the science and recommends standards. The NRPB, and with it the HPA, explicitly adopt a precautionary standard. With regard to children, the NRPB's 2004 report recommends that "…in the absence of new scientific evidence, the recommendation in the Stewart Report on limiting the use of mobile phones by children remains appropriate as a precautionary measure."(19)

In 2004, the International Association of Fire Fighters (IAFF) decided that they would not permit cell phone antennas on firehouses. The decision was made by resolu-tion at the IAFF's annual delegate assembly. The resolution directed the IAFF to review the potential health risks from cell antennas. If the science demonstrated a risk, then the union would oppose the use of fire stations as sites for cell antennas until further science demonstrated that cell antennas are safe.(20)

The resolution was passed in August 2004. In April 2005, the union's Health and Safety Department completed the review of the science. They found more than ample evidence to conclude that the union should oppose cell antennas on fire stations. The position paper included 49 references and a bibliography of 40 citations.(21)

Based on that evidence, the resolution cites a wide range of effects experienced by fire fighters:
• slowed reaction times,
• lack of focus,
• lack of impulse control, • severe headaches,
• anesthesia-like sleep,
• sleep deprivation,
• depression,
• tremors, and
• vertigo.(22)

Three things are worth noting about the substance of the resolution and the union's official position. First, the firefighters were focused on their ability to do their job. Second, firefighters were involuntarily exposed to a health risk. And third, the firefighters oppose cell antennas on fire stations until they are proven safe.

The decision that the firefighters faced a decision we all face is how to evaluate the safety of wireless technologies and decide what level of involuntary risk we are willing to take:(23)
• use it unless there's good evidence that it's harmful,
• or don't use it until there's good evidence that it's safe.
So consider this: 47% of independently funded studies found cancer effects, 69% found effects on cell function, 77% found effects on electrical signaling in the body, and 83% found physiological and behavioral effects. Suppose you have several hundred marine biologists study your swimming pool. Forty-seven percent (or 69% or 77% or 83%) of the biologists say you've got a shark in your pool. Would you dive in? Would you let your kids dive in?(24)

RFR Exposures

Citywide WiFi is only the latest RFR wireless technology to place us involuntarily at risk. Cell phone networks are the best-known; these include personal digital assistants (PDAs) such as the Blackberry™. Wireless networks at home and at the office are newer than cell phones and are another RFR exposure. Even if you don't have one, your neighbor might, and that will expose you. Also relatively new are the Bluetooth technologies used for applications such as hands-free
telephone headsets that operate using RFR. The familiar cordless phone is another RFR exposure that might put you at as much risk as a cell phone.(25)

What these technologies share is reciprocal receiving and transmitting of RFR signals between an end-user device and antennas that link the device to a network. There are three characteristics of these RFR signals that are believed to contribute to the biological and health effects of wireless technologies: signal strength, frequency, and modulation.(26)

Citywide WiFi uses a signal strength similar to cell phones. Signal strength is measured in watts, a standard unit of energy. Wireless networks for the home and office have less signal strength (although they can be increased with boosters), while Bluetooth devices and cordless phones have even less strength.

All these technologies use roughly the same frequency band: 0.3 to 3 GHz. GHz stands for gigahertz. A hertz is a standard measure of electromagnetic radiation created by sending an alternating electrical current through an antenna that is one cycle per second. A gigahertz is one billion cycles per second. The higher the GHz, the faster the current alternates.

An alternative way of measuring RFR is in wavelength. Wavelengths have an exact and inverse relationship to frequency: higher frequencies correspond to shorter wavelengths. Visible light is electromagnetic radiation with higher frequencies and shorter wavelengths than RFR, with red light having a lower frequency and longer wavelength than blue light.

Modulation refers to whether the signal comes at a constant frequency (as in AM radio and analog cell phone systems) or in pulses (as in FM radio and digital cell phones). All digital wireless technologies are pulsed.

Risk increases with signal strength. The frequencies used by wireless technologies are to some extent "ideal" for affecting our bodies because the wavelengths are at a human scale. Digital (pulsed) signals are of greater risk than analog signals.27

Short-term, high-intensity exposures to wireless RFR have received the most research attention, in particular the acute affects of cell phones. Far fewer studies have looked at long-term effects of cell phone use let alone the use of other wireless devices. Even less-studied are the effects of the low-intensity, persistent exposure to RFR from cell phone and WiFi antennas.

Electrohypersensitivity

Much of the discussion about RFR health effects is framed as a concern for people who are electrohypersensitive. Unlike immune-mediated hyper-sensitivity that responds to allergens, electrohypersensitivity is a reaction to nonionizing electromagnetic radiation from video display monitors, cell phones, cordless phones, wireless routers, or other RFR source. Characteristic symptoms of electrohypersensitivity can include any of the following:28
• localized heat and tingling,
• dry upper respiratory tract and eye irritation,
• brain fog, headache, and nausea,
• swollen mucus membranes,
• muscle and joint pain,
• heart palpitations, and
• progressively severe sensitivity to light.
Critics argue that electro-hypersensitivity is not a physical ailment but a psychological one.
Research led by Olle Johansson, MD, at the Karolinska Institute in Stockholm identified changes in mast cells in electrohyper-sensi-tives.(29)

So Dr. Johansson exposed rats to RFR exposures
similar to his human subjects, assuming that the rat psyche is not predisposed to produce the symptoms of electrohypersensitivity. The study produced results similar to what he found in human subjects: enlarged mast cells aggregated close to the surface of the skin. Dr. Johansson went further and tested both lectrohypersensitive and nonsensitive human subjects in similar exposures. Though the nonsensitives had no hypersensitivity symptoms, the mast cells in their skin showed the same behavior as electrohypersensitives, although the effect was less severe.(30)

Based on this research, Dr. Johansson and his colleague Shabnam Gangi proposed one
mechanism for the health effects of RFR as an immunological response, hypothesizing as to how this mechanism affects internal organs such as the cardiovascular and neurological systems.(31)

In The Hidden Disease,(32)

Finnish journalist Gunni Nordström associates electrohypersensitivity
with multiple chemical sensitivity and chronic fatigue syndrome. People in Sweden made electrohypersensitivity a public health issue when cathode ray tube-based video display monitors were introduced into offices. The rise of Silicon Valley – both in the original Silicon Valley and the many Silicon Valleys that have developed around the world – gave rise to similar health effects among computer-manufacturing workers. Researchers observed a relation-ship between materials used in products and their synergistic reaction with electromagnetic radiation.(33)

But both funding for research and data collection on occupational health quickly dried up when these issues came to light. Electrohypersensitives are not an unlucky few. They are likely harbingers in a complex landscape of environmental risks. Just like any other environmental stressor, RFR affects some people more than others. And as with other environmental stressors, the greater the overall burden, the greater the risk of becoming one of the "unlucky few."

Citywide WiFi adds to the existing burden of RFR.(34)

Just as burning more fossil fuels adds to the level of smog, adding more RFR adds to the level of electrosmog. You don't have to expose your home or your city to the increased burden created by WiFi. There's a viable alternative: a wired
Internet access and network. The hype might make it seem less convenient and more expensive. But what's a good night's sleep or reducing your risk of cancer worth?(35)

Notes
1. See the Wireless Philadelphia and San Francisco TechConnect websites: Wireless
Philadelphia accessed October 5, 2006 at http://www.wirelessphiladelphia.org. and San Francisco TechConnect accessed October 5, 2006 at Http://www.sfgov.org/techconnect.

2. The term is more familiar in Europe than in the US because of the greater political attention paid to the issue by citizen groups and politicians who support them. Beginning in Sweden in the 1980s, citizens suffering from electrohypersensitivity have been vocal advocates for research into
the health risks from nonionizing electromagnetic radiation and for the reduction of electrosmog. See Swedish Association for the Electrosensitive website: Swedish Association for the Electrosensitive accessed October 5, 2006 at http://www.feb.se/index_int.htm.

3. Slesin, Louis. EMF Health News. Your Own Health And Fitness. L. Berman: KPFA 94.1 FM Berkeley, CA. 2006: 60 minutes.

4. Carlo G, Schram M. Cell Phone: Invisible Hazards in the Wireless Age: An Insider's Alarming Discoveries About Cancer and Genetic Damage. New York, NY: Carroll & Graf; 2001.

5. FDA. Cell Phone Facts: Consumer Information on Wireless Phones. Available at:
http://www.fda.gov/cdrh/wireless/braincancer040606.html. Accessed July 3, 2006

6. The original Lai and Singh research was published in 1995 (Lai H, Singh NP. Acute low-intensity microwave exposure increases DNA single-strand breaks in rat brain cells.
Bioelectromagnetics. 1995. 16: 95-104.). The next year they published a paper showing even more alarming effects on DNA: double DNA strand breaks (Lai H, Singh NP. DNA single- and double-strand DNA breaks in rat brain cells after acute exposure to low-level radiofrequency Electromagnetic Radiation. Int J Radiat Biol. 1996. 69: 513-21.). Subsequent research has confirmed these findings and found that the breaks can persist in cell cultures through multiple mitotic cycles. Gandhi, G. Genetic damage in mobile phone users: some preliminary finding. Ind J Hum Genet. 2005. 11(2): 99-104.

7. The phrase "biological or health effect" is common in this literature. Some research is focused specifically on illness while other research simply looks at effects on the organism which might have a downstream health effect.

8. For example, Hardell L, Carlbert M, Hansson K, Mild KH. Pooled analysis of two case-control studies on use of cellular and cordless telephones and the risk of malignant brain tumours diagnosed in 1997-2003. Int J Oncol. 2006. 28(2): 502-18.

9. For example, Diem E, et al. Non-thermal DNA breakage by mobile-phone radiation (1800mhz) in human fibroblasts and in transformed Gfsh-R17 rat granulosa cells in vitro. Mutat Res. 2005. 583: 178-83 and Gandhi G. Genetic damage in mobile phone users: some preliminary finding. Ind J Hum Genet. 2005. 11(2): 99-104.

10. For example, Barteri M, Pala A, Rotella S. Structural and kinetic effects of mobile phone microwaves on acetylcholinesterase activity. Biophys Chem. 2005. 113(3): 245-53.

11. For example, Xu S, et al. Chronic exposure to Gsm 1800-Mhz microwaves reduces excitatory synaptic activity in cultured hippocampal neurons. Neurosci Lett. 2006. 398(3): 253-7. 12. Langer P, et al. Hands-free mobile phone conversation impairs the peripheral visual system to an extent comparable to an alcohol level of 4-5 G 100 Ml. Hum Psychoparmacol. 2005. 20(1): 65-
6.

13. A telling example is described in the November 2005 edition of Microwave News: Slesin, L. When enough is never enough: a reproducible EMF effect at 12 Mg. Microwave News. 2005. 25(2): 1-2. Beginning in 1992, seven separate research projects have demonstrated an effect on breast cancer cell metabolism from extremely low electromagnetic radiation, intensities much lower than current standards and well below intensities that are supposed to have any effect. The effect disrupts cell signaling. Each report was ignored. The original researcher was, as Louis
Slesin describes it, "drummed out of the EMF profession." The others have had funding cut and endured other harassments. An even more chilling example is described in Gunni Nordström's The Invisible Disease: The Dangers of Environmental Illnesses Caused by Electromagnetic Fields and Chemical Emissions. (New York: O Books. 2004.) She describes how the once-promising career of Olle Johansson, MD, a leading dermatological researcher at the Karolinska
Institute in Stockholm, Sweden, has been damaged. With over 400 peer-reviewed publications and major discoveries in dermatology, Dr. Johansson has been refused promotion to full professorship, denied research funding, and denied research facilities for his continued interest in RFR health effects and for his advocacy for electrohypersensitives.

14. The notorious example of how pharmaceutical companies shape medical research and
medical practice is described by two insiders: Marcia Angell, MD, a former editor at the New England Journal of Medicine and John Abramson, MD, a professor at the Harvard School of Medicine Angell, Marcia. The Truth About the Drug Companies: How They Deceive Us and What to Do About It. New York: Random House; 2004; and Abramson, John. Overdosed America: The Broken Promise of American Medicine. New York: Harper; 2005.

15. Dr. Lai's 2005 review article is a good example. It describes the many issues in the field that remain unresolved: Lai H. Biological effects of radiofrequency electromagnetic fields. In Encyclopedia of Biomaterials and Biomedical Engineering. G.L. Bowlin and G. Wnek: Taylor & Francis Books; 2005.

16. FDA. Cell Phone Facts: Do Wireless Phones Pose a Health Hazard? Available at:
http://www.fda.gov/cellphones/qa.html#22. Accessed July 3, 2006.

17. In April 1999, the UK's Ministry of Health formed the Independent Expert Group on Mobile Phones to evaluate the safety of cell phones. Chaired by Sir William Stewart, the commission of independent scientists (which became known as the Stewart Group) reported in May 2000 that enough scientific evidence existed to be concerned about health risks from "subtle effects on biological functions, especially those of the brain." The Stewart Group noted in particular that children would be more susceptible to harm. See the Stewart Group's report: Independent Expert
Group on Mobile Phones. Chilton, Oxfordshire, UK: National Radiological Protection Board 2000.
Available at http://www.iegmp.org.uk. Accessed July 3, 2006.

18. Health Protection Agency. Mobile Telephony and Health: Health Protection Advice. Available at:
http://www.hpa.org.uk/radiation/understand/information_sheets/mobile_telephony/health_advice.htm. Accessed July 3, 2006

19. National Radiological Protection Board. Chilton, Oxfordshire, UK: National Radiological Protection Board; 2004: 11.

20. International Association of Fire Fighters. International Association of Fire Fighters, Division of Occupational Health, Safety and Medicine. 2005.
21. Ibid. pp. 13-38. Dr. Lai's database was used as a resource.

22. Ibid. p. 13.

23. For an excellent discussion of how to evaluate environmental risk, see Mary O'Brien's Making Better Environmental Decisions: An Alternative to Risk Assessment. Cambridge, Massachusetts: MIT Press; 2000.

24. Some might rightfully howl at this analogy. An "exposure" to a shark is nothing like an exposure to RFR. No analogy is perfect. So consider another. Hundreds of microbiologists test your pool water for cholera, and 47% find it. Or hundreds of chemists test your pool water for a powerful toxin with both short-term and long-term effects, something like mercury, and 47% find it at various concentrations. Sharks are just so much more dramatic. And the analogy makes the
same point: how much agreement among scientists do you need to be assured that something is safe?

25. Although the signal strength from cordless phones is far less than cell phones, people tend to use them for longer periods of time: exposure per unit time is less for the cordless phone, but the total exposure is equivalent to that of a cell phone. A European study found equivalent cancer risks for cell phone users and cordless phone users (Hardell L, Carlbert M and Mild KH. Pooled
analysis of two case-control studies on use of cellular and cordless telephones and the risk of malignant brain tumours diagnosed in 1997-2003. Int J Oncol. 2006. 28(2): 502-18.)

26. Lai H. Biological effects of radiofrequency electromagnetic fields. In Encyclopedia of Biomaterials and Biomedical Engineering. G.L. Bowlin and G. Wnek: Taylor & Francis Books,
2005.

27. Ibid.

28. Johansson O. Screen dermatitis and electrosensitivity: preliminary observations in the human skin. In Electromagnetic Environments and Health in Buildings. D. Clements-Croome. New York:
Spon Press; 2004: Chapter 20. Nordström G. The Invisible Disease: The Dangers of
Environmental Illnesses Caused by Electromagnetic Fields and Chemical Emissions. New York:
O Books; 2004. and Swedish Association for the Electrosensitive. Available at
http://www.feb.se/index_int.htm. Accessed October 5, 2006.

29. A mast cell is a type of immune cell that stores histamine crystals, which are released during an allergic response. The skin of the electrohypersensitives Dr. Johansson examined had an abnormally high concentration of mast cells close to the skin's surface that also had high loads of histamine. In other words, these subjects' immune-mediated responses are in a reactive state.

30. Johansson O. Screen dermatitis and electrosensitivity: preliminary observations in the human skin. In Electromagnetic Environments and Health in Buildings. D. Clements-Croome. New York: Spon Press; 2004: Chapter 20, Johansson O, et al. A case of extreme and general cutaneous light sensitivity in combination with so-called ‘screen dermatitis' and ‘electrosensitivity' – a
successful rehabilitation after vitamin a treatment – a case report. Journal of the Autralasian College of Nutrition and Envrionmental Medicine. 1999; 18(1): 13-6.

31. Gangi S and Johansson O. A theoretical model based upon mast cells and histamine to explain the recently proclaimed sensitivity to electric and/or magnetic fields in humans. Medical Hypotheses. 2000; 54(4): 663-71.

32. Nordström G. The Invisible Disease: The Dangers of Environmental Illnesses Caused by Electromagnetic Fields and Chemical Emissions. New York: O Books; 2004.

33. LaDou J. Occupational health in the semiconductor industry. In Challenging the Chip: Labor Rights and Environmental Justice in the Global Electronics Industry. Smith T, Sonnenfeld DA, Pellow DN. Philadelpha, PA: Temple University Press; 2006: Chapter 3.

34. The total burden of already existing electrosmog goes beyond send-receive wireless technologies like WiFi and cell phones and includes pedestrian technologies like radio and television broadcast signals. Research by Dr. Johansson and his colleague Örjan Hallberg at the Karolinska Institute looked at the incidence of cancer and other 20th Century illnesses in Europe and the US and found a striking association between the increase in certain cancers during the
20th Century and exposure to RFR as measured by radio and TV broadcasts. Hallberg O,
Johansson O. Cancer trends during the 20th century. Journal of the Autralasian College of
Nutrition and Environmental Medicine. 2002a; 21(1): 3-8; Hallberg O, Johansson O. Melanoma incidence and frequency modulation (Fm) broadcasting. Archives of Environmental Health. 2002b; 57(1): 32-40; Hallberg O, Johansson O. Fm broadcasting exposure time and malignant
melanoma incidence. Electromagnetic Biology and Medicine. 2005; 24: 1-8.

35. The Your Own Health And Fitness radio show (http://www.yourownhealthandfitness.org) has
carried several interviews over the past year on RFR health risks and safeguards. Havas, Magda.
Dirty Electricity and EMF Health Dangers. Your Own Health And Fitness. L. Berman: KPFA 94.1
FM Berkeley, CA. 2006: 60 minutes; Johansson, Olle. The Science of RFR Health Risks. Your Own Health And Fitness. L. Berman: KPFA 94.1 FM Berkeley, CA. 2006: 60 minutes; Johansson, Olle and Doug Loranger. Electrosmog. Your Own Health And Fitness. L. Berman: KPFA 94.1 FM Berkeley, CA. 2005: 60 minutes; Levitt, B. Blake and Jan Newton. Wireless Public Health Crisis.
Your Own Health And Fitness. L. Berman: KPFA 94.1 FM Berkeley, CA. 2006: 60 minutes, Sage, Cindy. Smart Exposures: Understanding Risks from EMF and RFR. Your Own Health And Fitness. L. Berman: KPFA 94.1 FM Berkeley, CA. 2005: 60 minutes; Sage, Cindy and B. Blake Levitt. Where You're Exposed and What to Do: EMF and RFR. Your Own Health And Fitness. L. Berman: KPFA 94.1 FM Berkeley, CA. 2006: 60 minutes; Slesin, Louis. EMF Health News. Your
Own Health And Fitness. L. Berman: KPFA 94.1 FM Berkeley, CA. 2006: 60 minutes.

Jeffry Fawcett, PhD is an environmental economist, writer, and health educator. He is the founder and president of the Sustainable Health Institute, a non-profit with the mission of building the capacity of people and their communities to thrive. He produces the Your Own

Health And Fitness radio show with Layna Berman, work that is the source and inspiration of the work of the Sustainable Health Institute.

The posts to the Editorials blog originate on the show. He also is the publisher and
principal contributor to the quarterly Progressive Health Observer: A News Commentary Alternative to Big Box Medicine. For more information on PHO go to its web page. In his health education practice, Dr. Fawcett consults with individuals and groups about health and medical issues. He also consults with people in identifying expsoures to environmental stressors in their home and at work. For more, go to his web page.

Lakehead University`s Wi-Fi Policy




WiFi Policy

General Statement

Lakehead University is completely connected to the World Wide Web.Connectivity is provided by a comprehensive campus fibre-optic network with approximately 8,000 plug-in sites, as well as internet cafés and computer laboratories, giving access to 650 computers.Only those areas not served by the fibre-optic backbone have a wireless option.

Purpose

The purpose of this policy is to limit wireless connectivity based on the “precautionary principle” as there are numerous scientific studies that suggest there is a basis for concern that continuous or frequent long-term exposure to WiFi electromagnetic fields (EMFs) could have adverse health effects (see Benevento and Catania Resolutions attached as Appendices A and B).

Background

Microwave radiation in the frequency range of WiFi has been shown to increase permeability of the blood-brain barrier, cause behavioural changes, alter cognitive functions, activate a stress response, interfere with brain waves, cell growth, cell communication, calcium ion balance, etc., and cause single and double strand DNA breaks at EMF levels as low as 0.005 w/kg.

Policy

There will be no use of WiFi in those areas of the University already served by hard wire connectivity until such time as the potential health effects have been scientifically rebutted or there are adequate protective measures that can be taken.

Review of Policy

The President will continue to monitor research in the area to determine whether a change in policy is warranted.

Wi-Fi backlash: Councils urge caution on networks in schools



Labour and Liberal Democrat councillors issue call for embargo in response to parents' concerns over children's exposure to radiation in the classroom

By Geoffrey Lean, Environment Editor
Sunday, 15 July 2007
Independent.co.uk

Local councillors are pressing for the suspension of the use of Wi-Fi in schools, in the first official revolt in Britain against the widespread use of the technology in the classroom.

The powerful overview and scrutiny committee (OSC) of Haringey council in London resolved this month that there should be "a precautionary approach" to Wi-Fi because of concerns about risks to the health of children and teachers.

With cross-party agreement, it recommended that no new Wi-Fi systems be installed and that existing ones should be discontinued pending "full consultation with parents and staff". The recommendation was last week welcomed as "excellent news" by the Professional Association of Teachers, which believes the "proliferation" of networks in schools "could be having serious implications for the health of some staff and pupils".

In a separate development, Camarthenshire County Council's education and children's scrutiny committee called on its officers to draw up "a good practice guide" on how the technology should be used in schools.

The councils' moves follow a call by Sir William Stewart, chairman of the Health Protection Agency, for a review of the use of Wi-Fi in the classroom. His concerns about possible damage to health from the radiation it emits were first reported by The Independent on Sunday in April and later followed up by the BBC's Panorama.

As the IoS reported last week, two-thirds of Britons believe that similar radiation from mobile phones and their masts affects their health. Authoritative Scandinavian studies have suggested that the use of mobiles can cause cancer and kill off brain cells, leading to fears that today's young people could go senile in middle age.

There is much less evidence on effects from masts though studies have revealed a worrying incidence of headaches, fatigue, nausea, dizziness and problems with memory and sleep.

Wi-Fi systems effectively take small versions of these masts into homes and schools, but virtually no research has been done on their effects. By some estimates, half of all primary and four-fifths of secondary schools have already installed them, with the encouragement of the Government, which describes them as "magical".

Yet the regional government of the Austrian province of Salzburg has been advising schools not to put them in for more than 18 months and is now considering whether to ban the technology altogether. The Austrian medical association, to which all the country's doctors belong, is lobbying against its deployment.

In March, the Bavarian parliament issued a recommendation to all schools in the German province not to use the technology, and last summer the Frankfurt city government said it would not install it until its safety was proven.

The Haringey councillors' unanimous call for a cautious approach overruled the advice from council officers that it was not necessary. In a report to the committee, the council's deputy director of the children and young people's service advised that it "cannot apply, as the likelihood of harm being realised is extremely low".

But, after hearing from concerned local parents, both the Labour and Liberal Democrat councillors representing the only two parties on the council agreed the technology should be curbed.

Councillor Gideon Bull, the committee's chairman, who himself used to work for an internet company, commented: "It is extremely worrying. We have an obligation – particularly where little kids are concerned to act responsibly."

Councillor Martin Newton, Lib Dem opposition leader on the committee, said: "We just don't know the long-term health effects and should be taking a precautionary approach.

"For me, sufficient doubts have been raised around [the] potential health effects of Wi-Fi that it is right that parents and staff are given advice and information to allow them to make informed choices and be fully consulted on its use in schools."

The committee's recommendation, which goes to the council's cabinet for a decision on 26 July, says that Haringey should write to schools recommending that they consider the hard-wiring of computer equipment, which has sparked far fewer health concerns, as "the preferred option".

It adds that, if after "full consultation with parents and staff", schools do decide to install Wi-Fi, the council should recommend that it "is only switched on when necessary".

Dangers of the wireless cell phone wi-fi and emf age Part 4

Dangers of the wireless cell phone wi-fi and emf age Part 3




Dangers of the wireless cell phone wi-fi and emf age Part 2




Dangers of the wireless cell phone, wi-fi and emf age Part 1

Panorama - Wi-fi a warning signal part 3

Panorama - Wi-fi a warning signal part 2




Panorama - Wi-fi a warning signal part 1

Swedish town blighted by WiMAX


By INQUIRER newsdesk: Monday, 12 June 2006, 4:27 PM

THE WI-MAXING-UP of the small Swedish town of Götene went horribly wrong when local residents around the base-station started dropping like flies.

It seems that within hours of the WiMAX base-station being activated, local hospital emergency services received calls from residents with complaints, ranging from sharp headaches and difficulty breathing, blurry vision, and, according to a report, two cases of heart arrhythmia.

The sufferers' symptoms are said to have subsided after they moved away from the base-station.

Coverage of the incident on Sweden's STV Debatt apparently caused questions to be raised about WiMAX, leading to calls that Swedish government to close down the nation's WiMAX networks.

The Swedes are particularly unconvinced of the safety of some electro-magnetic frequencies on humans, and there are plenty of vested interests piping up to pooh-pooh the Scandinavians' concerns.

Monday, October 20, 2008

Transform Penang but not at public health expense


SM Mohd Idris
Oct 3, 08 4:31pm

CAP is shocked at the Penang government’s ignorance of Wi-Fi’s potential health risks, which is currently a world public health and safety issue. The state government’s defensive and non- sympathetic stand on the matter goes against current trends of international concern on wireless technology.

We are disturbed by the state’s lack of understanding of residents’ rightful fears of the impending health and environmental consequences of the Penang Wi-Fi project.

We are also concerned that the state government has decided to ignore public objections and will go ahead with the project. The CM’s refusal to entertain views from concerned groups on the issue is undemocratic and unfair.

CAP urges the CM to view public opposition to the project in the right light – as constructive criticism, not naughty dissent – and to consider reviewing its Wi-Fi plans for Penang. Wi-Fi use state-wide should be viewed with caution, not reckless abandon. As the guardian of public health, the state government is duty-bound to make rational decisions that will benefit, not pose harm, to consumers.

Any understanding of Wi-Fi, or official decision that sanctions it as safe for public use, is fundamentally flawed if it does not take into account all of the following:

Wi-Fi, like mobile phones, is an untested technology. Wi-Fi operates in a way very similar to mobile phones which itself, is not a safe technology. At a September 2008 testimony before a subcommittee of the US House of Representatives Committee on Oversight and Reform, scientists warned that the potential link between mobile hones and brain cancer could be similar to the link between lung cancer and smoking – something tobacco companies took 50 years to recognise.

David Carpenter, director of the Institute of Health and Environment at the University of Albany, one of the scientists who testified, stated: "Precaution is warranted even in absence of absolutely final evidence concerning the magnitude of the risk". Society "must not repeat the situation we had with the relationship between smoking and lung cancer where we … waited until very ‘i’ was dotted and ‘t’ was crossed before warnings were issued."

Wi-Fi could be just as unsafe as mobile phones (both emit microwave radiation) but proof could be a long time in coming. The CM’s contention that "wireless service had never been proven by anyone as a health hazard despite numerous researches carried out worldwide over the years" is thus not reassuring.

Present official stands in other countries on the same issue: Many advanced countries have adopted a precautionary approach to the use of wireless technology. The Swiss government issued a health alert on electrosmog in 2005.

Germany, Austria and Belgium have all advised schools against installing Wi-Fi networks. In France, five public libraries shut down their Wi-Fi over health concerns. Last year, the German government warned its citizens to avoid using Wi-Fi.

The above actions were all on the basis that a possible risk has not been ruled out, rather than because an actual threat has not been determined. The Penang CM’s conjecture that: "Until today no one has proven that wireless system endangers health" is thus no guarantee of safety. It reflects the state’s undiscerning view of the matter, which flies in the face of conventional wisdom and does not inspire public confidence.

Latest world developments on the matter: Concern over Wi-Fi has been recently raised in the European Parliament. In August 2007, the Bioinitiative Report, endorsed by 14 world experts the latest scientific opinion on electromagnetic fields (EMFs) – warned that "corrections are needed in the way we accept, test and deploy" wireless technologies "in order to avert public health problems of a global nature".

Wi-Fi health concerns need to be publicly addressed. According to Dr George L Carlo, Chairman of the Washington-based nonprofit Science and Public Policy Institute’s Safe Wireless Initiative project, "EMR (electromagnetic radiation) disease and environmental impacts are every bit as important as global warming, Aids and other issues that have taken on political importance around the world."

The CM’s directive that opponents of the Penang project "move out of the way" of the state’s technological advancement drive is thus a blatant disregard of international advice.

Current radiation safety limits are not up to date, and are thus not a reliable benchmark for evaluating wireless technology’s safety.

According to the Bioinitiative Report, existing public safety standards for microwave radiation in nearly every country of the world are "thousands of times too lenient". The report states that: "The lower limit of reported human health effects has dropped 100-fold below the safety standard (for mobile phones and PDAs), 1,000-10,000 fold for other wireless (cell towers at distance; Wi-Fi and WLAN devices). The entire basis for safety standards is called into question, and it is not unreasonable to question the safety of RF (radiofrequency) at any level."

According to Powerwatch, Britain’s independent electromagnetic radiation watchdog and research organisation, although recently there has been a number of studies showing very specific biological effects far lower than safety levels set by the International Commission for Non-Ionising Radiation Protection (ICNIRP), there is no international guidance that has taken any of these studies into effect.

The Penang government’s decision to go ahead with the project may thus jeopardise public health. Such a stand also ignores people’s rights to basic health and a safe living environment.

It is obvious from the above that Wi-Fi poses "threats of serious or irreversible damage", a condition which, under the Precautionary Principle that several countries now adopt, is a valid basis for the Penang government to abandon the project, or at the very least, review it.

It is sad that the Penang CM deems public consultation before implementation of the project as "unrealistic". The Penang Wi-Fi project is not just a state matter. It is also a public interest matter. It’s a travesty of social justice for a government to refuse to engage the public in a major state decision that is likely to directly affect them in more ways than one.

A project of this scale, with the potential to cause worrying health ramifications to every citizen of Penang, necessitates consultation with the people, addressing of health risks, and tabling of public discussions (CAT) – which is in tandem with the state government’s own CAT (Competency, Accountability and Transparency) policy.

The Penang government should assuage the people’s anxiety with concrete actions, not intensify public jitters with an arbitrary stance that raises more questions than answers. All that is needed for a public threat to occur is for the government of the day to do nothing. Authorities in advanced countries are adopting a precautionary approach to Wi-Fi. The Penang government should do the same.

"Transforming Penang into a technological state" should not be at the expense of public health.

The writer is president, Consumers Association of Penang.

There is growing evidence that Wi-Fi technology is harmful

The Independent, 31/5/07

My war on electrosmog: Julia Stephenson sets out to clear the airwaves How one woman fought back after being diagnosed by her naturopath with overexposure to Wi-Fi and mobile phone frequencies Published: 31 May 2007 A few months ago I noticed I was feeling dog-tired and drained all the time. Usually a good sleeper, I’d suddenly begun waking up early in the morning and finding myself unable to go back to sleep.

It wasn’t only me that was drooping. My once-lush plants had lost their lustre too. Ridiculous, considering how well I look after myself - and my plants.

I am well-doctored, to put it mildly. I probably consult more doctors than Woody Allen, who has separate screenings of his movies for his doctors. Everyone is entitled to a hobby; mine just happens to be my health, and what a fascinating hobby it is.

When at a loss to explain my new malaise, I visited my naturopath. It may sound unorthodox, but if it works, who cares?

She insisted that my exhaustion was caused by electromagnetic "smog" in my flat. The problem, she explained, is that our dependence on office and communications equipment (especially mobile phones and the masts needed to power them, as well as microwaves, computers and electrical equipment), exposes us to frequencies that can have a detrimental effect on our wellbeing, especially if we are run-down, or if our immune system is compromised in some way.

This made sense, as my symptoms had begun soon after installing wireless technology in my sitting room. Wireless (Wi-Fi) technology allows you to access emails and the internet anywhere in your living space. It’s convenient but I could live without it if meant having more physical energy. So I immediately turned off my wireless network and replaced it with broadband.

My naturopath is not alone in her concern. There is growing evidence that Wi-Fi technology is harmful. When the Swedish town of Götene activated their new Wi-Fi system in May 2006, within hours the local hospital emergency services were receiving calls from residents complaining of a number of symptoms: difficulty breathing, blurry vision, headaches and even cases of heart arrhythmia. On 23 May 2006, Sweden’s STV followed up the story on their current affairs programme "Debatt".

The worldwide centre of the mobile phone industry, Sweden is where much of the research on environmental illness has been carried out. It was the first country to recognise electromagnetic hypersensitivity as a valid medical condition, and has set up a federal body to assist sufferers of those affected (www.feb.se). There have been calls for the Swedish government to close down the nation’s Wi-Fi networks, pending further investigation.

Those concerned about possible side-effects believe that our unprecedented exposure to electrical equipment, mobile phones and Wi-Fi mean that we are surrounded by a soup of electromagnetic smog at all times. In effect, we live in an electro-dictatorship: even if you haven’t voted for this technology by say, owning a mobile phone, you may still suffer the same effects as those who have. For example, although I’ve turned off my wireless access I can still tap in to my neighbour’s Wi-Fi downstairs.

Research being carried out by industry, the Government and academics has so far failed to find a persuasive link between mobile phone masts and health problems. The Department of Health and the Mobile Operators Association insist that British masts conform to international safety standards. A research group commissioned by the government-funded Health Protection Agency reported: "Exposure levels from living near to mobile phone base stations are extremely low and the overall evidence indicates they are unlikely to pose a risk to health." But it continued: "Research has limitations and the possibility remains open that there could be health effects from exposure - hence continued research is needed."

Many doctors are now convinced that this powerful technology is storing up huge problems for our future health. To date, 1,200 physicians in Germany, and 2,000 worldwide, have signed the Freiburger Appeal, a petition for severe restrictions on wireless technology. The doctors say they are seeing a dramatic increase in certain diseases and symptoms in their patients.

"Any imbalance in our electromagnetic field creates a disturbance in cell structure and function, which can lead to illness in sensitive individuals," says London-based complementary health practitioner Dr Nicole de Canha.

Even cordless hands-free home telephones - such a boon to multitaskers, enabling one to patiently listen to friends and family for hours while cleaning cupboards, re-potting house plants and reorganising the CD collection - are now off-limits. Their electrical force-field is nearly as powerful as that of a mobile phone. Since I’m now chained to a phone on a lead, my cupboards are filthy and my friends are neglected. But at least I’m less radioactive.

It’s much harder to avoid mobile phone masts, however. Over the past 10 years they have sprouted all over the country to power the mobile phones owned by over 95 per cent of the population. To find out how close you live to a mast go to www.sitefinder.radio.gov.uk. The results may shock you: there are now 35,000 mobile phone masts in the UK, and chances are that several are in your immediate vicinity. It’s supposed that you are never more than 10 feet away from a rat in London; you may find yourself even closer to a phone mast.

Despite being implicated in a number of health problems - something that alarms parents of the one in 10 schools located close to masts - these masts need no planning permission and are often disguised in trees, petrol stations, shop signs, even church steeples. For instance, the support pole for the golden angel weathervane on Guildford Cathedral is actually a mobile mast, supporting several antennas. In return for access to the coveted hilltop site, the golden angel was regilded. It seems that even God cannot offer protection from this insidious pollution.

Fortunately there are steps that concerned individuals can take to reduce the amount of "electro-smog" to which they are subject. Like many people, I’m mobile-dependent, but I now use a headset that delivers sound through an air-filled wireless tube similar to a doctor’s stethoscope (but much smaller, so you don’t look like you’re on call). Conventional headsets transmit sound to the earpiece through a wire, but as wire is an electrical conductor it may also deliver radiation directly to your head. Since I’ve started using the tube I no longer experience headaches or a slight ringing in my ears.

You could also try the Q-Link pendant, which employs "sympathetic resonance technology," something that the makers declare "repairs and tunes your biofield". Friends who wear a Q-Link report that they feel healthier and more energetic.

The homeopathic medicine company, New Vistas, and the Australian flower essence company, Bush Flower Remedies, both make drops that claim to reduce the amount of radiation stored in the body.

Also, for the past two months I’ve been using an electro-magnetic field protection unit plugged into a wall at home. The device was created by engineer and homeopath Gary Johnson. Disturbed with the increasing number of patients coming to him with skin problems, exhaustion, blurred vision, and symptoms similar to chronic fatigue syndrome, he suspected that they might be sensitive to electromagnetic radiation (EMR).

"The heart of the unit is a programmed microprocessor unit that produces a holograph field that is amplified through an internal aerial system. This protection field protects the human system from the negative effects of EMR," says Johnson. He says he has had great success in alleviating patients’ symptoms, and claims the unit offers unlimited protection from any negative electromagnetic emissions in a 700-square metre radius.

Professor Leif Salford, of Sweden’s Lund University, has been researching the effects of phone masts for 15 years. He says that exposure to radiation emitted by mobile phones and masts can destroy cells in the parts of the brain responsible for memory, movement and learning, and calls mankind’s dependence on mobile phones "the world’s largest biological experiment ever".

As yet, no one knows what price we will pay for our dependence on modern technology.

Additional research by the National Institute of Environmental Health Sciences, USA (http://www.niehs.nih.gov) and the Office of Communications, the independent regulator for the UK communications industries (www.ofcom.org.uk)

Mid-term review of the European Environment and Health Action Plan 2004-2010




04-09-2008 - 12:09

In adopting an own-initiative report on the mid-term review of the European Environment and Health Action Plan 2004-2010, the European Parliament acknowledges the efforts made by the Commission since the action plan was launched in 2004. It considers, however, that such an action plan is bound to fail at least in part, since it is designed solely to accompany existing Community policies. The report was adopted with 522 votes in favour and 16 against.

MEPs say the action plans is not based upon a preventive policy intended to reduce illnesses linked to environmental factors, and it pursues no clear, quantified objective.

MEPs regret the fact that the Commission has not provided sufficient funding for human biological monitoring in 2008 to enable it (as it had promised Parliament and the Member States) to introduce a consistent approach to biological monitoring within the EU. They call on the Commission to respond by 2010 to two essential objectives:

- Make members of the general public aware of environmental pollution and the impact thereof on their health;
- Adapt European risk-reduction policy.

MEPs recommend that the Member States meet their obligations as regards implementation of Community legislation and that the Commission does not weaken those laws under pressure from lobbies or regional or international organisations.

Vulnerable groups: MEPs stress that, when it comes to assessing the impact of environmental factors on health, consideration should be given first and foremost to vulnerable groups such as pregnant women, newborn babies, children and the elderly. Those who are the most susceptible to pollutants should be protected by specific measures to reduce exposure to indoor environmental contaminants in healthcare facilities and schools.

A new dynamic approach to protection based on the precautionary principle: MEPs claim that the EU needs to apply a continuous dynamic and flexible approach to the Action Plan and that it should acquire specific expertise on the subject of environmental health, to be based on transparency and on a multidisciplinary and adversarial approach which would thus enable the general public's distrust of official agencies and committees of experts to be countered. Although there have been genuine advances in environmental policy in recent years, MEPs state that EU policy still lacks a comprehensive preventive strategy and fails to apply the precautionary principle. The Commission should revise the criteria as regards recourse to the precautionary principle pursuant to European Court of Justice case-law, in order to ensure that an action and security principle based on the adoption of provisional and proportionate measures lies at the heart of Community health and environment policies.

Air quality: MEPs call once again upon the Commission to come forward as soon as possible with concrete measures on indoor air quality. The Commission is called upon to draft appropriate minimum requirements to guarantee the quality of indoor air in buildings to be newly built. MEPs recommend that, in awarding individual European Union support, the Commission bear in mind its impact on the quality of indoor air, exposure to electromagnetic radiation and the health of particularly vulnerable sections of the population. They also call for environmental quality standards for priority substances in water to be laid down. MEPs point out that certain Member States have successfully introduced mobile analysis laboratories (or ‘green ambulances’) to enable habitat pollution in public and private places to be diagnosed swiftly and reliably. They consider that the Commission could promote such a practice within the Member States which have not yet acquired such a means of direct intervention at a polluted site.

Dangers of new technologies: MEPs are concerned about the lack of specific legal provisions to ensure the safety of consumer products containing nanoparticles being put on the market. They are greatly concerned at the Bio-Initiative international report on electromagnetic fields, which highlights the health risks posed by emissions from mobile-telephony devices such as mobile telephones, UMTS, Wifi, Wimax and Bluetooth, and also DECT landline telephones. It notes that the limits on exposure to electromagnetic fields which have been set for the general public are obsolete. They do not take account of developments in information and communication technologies or vulnerable groups, such as pregnant women, newborn babies and children.

Mental health: MEPs call on the Commission to pay attention to the serious problem of mental health, considering the number of suicides in the EU, and to devote more resources to the development of adequate prevention strategies and therapies.

To conclude, MEPs urge the Commission and Member States to acknowledge the advantages of the prevention and precautionary principles and to develop and implement tools enabling potential environmental and health threats to be anticipated and countered. They recommend that the Commission cost the 'second cycle' of this action plan and make provision for appropriate funding covering a larger number of practical measures to reduce environmental impact on health and to implement prevention and precautionary measures. Lastly, they urge the Council to take a decision without delay on the proposal for a regulation establishing the Union Solidarity Fund

Germany Warns Citizens to Avoid Using Wi-Fi

By Geoffrey Lean
The Independent UK

Sunday 09 September 2007

People should avoid using Wi-Fi wherever possible because of the risks it may pose to health, the German government has said.

Its surprise ruling - the most damning made by any government on the fast-growing technology - will shake the industry and British ministers, and vindicates the questions that The Independent on Sunday has been raising over the past four months.

And Germany's official radiation protection body also advises its citizens to use landlines instead of mobile phones, and warns of "electrosmog" from a wide range of other everyday products, from baby monitors to electric blankets.

The German government's ruling - which contrasts sharply with the unquestioning promotion of the technology by British officials - was made in response to a series of questions by Green members of the Bundestag, Germany's parliament.

The Environment Ministry recommended that people should keep their exposure to radiation from Wi-Fi "as low as possible" by choosing "conventional wired connections". It added that it is "actively informing people about possibilities for reducing personal exposure".

Its actions will provide vital support for Sir William Stewart, Britain's official health protection watchdog, who has produced two reports calling for caution in using mobile phones and who has also called for a review of the use of Wi-Fi in schools. His warnings have so far been ignored by ministers and even played down by the Health Protection Agency, which he chairs.

By contrast the agency's German equivalent - the Federal Office for Radiation Protection - is leading the calls for caution.

Florian Emrich, for the office, says Wi-Fi should be avoided "because people receive exposures from many sources and because it is a new technology and all the research into its health effects has not yet been carried out".

British Scientist Questions the Safety of Wi-Fi

04/26/2007 04:54 PM

The chairman of Britain's Health Protection Agency, Sir William Stewart, is calling for the health risks of wireless internet or WiFi to be investigated. Stewart is particularly concerned about health of children who are more vulnerable to radiation.

The radiation from mobile phones and WiFi systems are very similar. Unlike phone radiation WiFi exposes everyone in the immediate area. Research coming out of Europe is raising questions about the long term safety of mobile phones.

Stewart is not alone in his concerns. The Austrian Medical Association is calling for a ban on WiFi in schools, a university in Ontario refused to install WiFi due to health concerns and a school in Illinois has been sued over its WiFi system.

多国政府关注WiFi辐射 不排除致癌可能

2008年3月28日 11:35 搜狐IT

中国全国政协委员、信息产业部电信研究院科技委副主任雷震洲在3月28日的通信业环境友好发展论坛上表示,需要对诸如WiFi这样的技术所带来的环境和健康风险保持警惕。

雷震洲透露,德国政府近日发布警告,人们应该尽量避免使用WiFi,因为这项技术可能给人体健康带来危害,德国官方防辐射部门还建议,人们应该尽可能用固话代替手机,德国环境部表示,未来将就减少个人辐射展开积极的宣传。

雷震洲又举例说,英国卫生保护局,已经决定对WiFi及其应用展开更深入的系统研究。更有人称辐射会加大患癌症的风险。另外,辐射可杀死脑细胞,这对儿童的成长危害非常大。英国一项报告显示WiFi将加速儿童自闭症的症状。虽然目前符合国际标准的WiFi的辐射没有潜在任何危险,但我们还是要对此保持警惕。

雷震洲还列举了欧洲环境局的两个结论,一个是国家IO工作组的科学研究报告,认为以前对辐射的安全限制过于宽松,现在造成的人体长期累计暴露于辐射的情况是前所未有的;第二个结论,因此不能排除WiFi致癌的可能

貝內文托(Benevento)決議

貝內文托(Benevento)決議
國際電磁輻射安全委員會(ICEMS) 於2006年2月22~24日在義大利貝內文托市(Benevento)舉辦了題為“電磁輻射預防:基本原理、相關法律及貫徹執行”的國際會議。會議為追憶W. Ross Adey博士 (1922~2004)舉辦了紀念活動。與會的科學家支持並重申了2002卡塔尼亞(CATANIA)決議,並對該決議進行了進一步的研討,形成以下一致意見:

1. 越來越多的證據表明就現有的電磁輻射暴露水準而言,電場、磁場、電磁場或電磁輻射(1)的職業暴露和公眾暴露均有可能危害健康。對於電磁輻射逐漸顯現的和潛在的健康影響證據需要進行全面的、獨立的而且是公開的評估,但這一工作尚未開展。

2. 儘管無線電通訊技術的發展突飛猛進,電力設施的投資也十分龐大,但是用於評估電磁輻射健康影響的資源還是嚴重不足。

3. 有證據表明,現階段某些資助基金在對電磁輻射健康研究結果分析和闡述方面存在排斥電磁輻射可能有害健康結論的偏見。

4. 低強度電磁場不能影響生物機能的觀點目前並不能代表當今學術界的觀點。

5. 基於我們對電磁生物學的研究綜述,無論是極低頻電磁場(ELF EMF)還是射頻電磁輻射(RF EMF)均具有一定的生物學效應。流行病學和體內外實驗研究均表明一些極低頻電磁場暴露能夠增加兒童癌症的患病風險,並能夠造成兒童和成人出現其他的健康問題。另外,越來越多的流行病學證據表明長期使用移動電話可能增加腦腫瘤的患病風險,移動電話電磁輻射是進行健康影響全面研究的第一個射頻電磁輻射。流行病學和實驗室研究表明電磁輻射職業暴露所導致的癌症和其他疾病風險是不容忽視的。癌症及其他疾病實驗室研究表明電磁輻射的易感性可能有一定的遺傳傾向。

6. 我們呼籲各國政府採用以預防為基本原則而制訂的電磁輻射公眾暴露和職業暴露指南(有些國家已經制訂了類似的電磁輻射暴露指南)。預防策略(2)的制訂應當以設計和執行標準為依據,而且並非必需設定具體暴露限值,因為這種限值可能會被錯誤地理解為在該強度以下的電磁輻射暴露對健康不會產生不良影響。預防策略應包括以下內容:

6.1 宣導使用無線電通訊系統的代用品,如光纖和同軸電纜;設計能滿足較高安全要求的移動電話,包括使輻射遠離頭部的設計;保留現有的有線電話網路;將居民區附近的高壓線轉為地下埋設,而在居民區附近架設高壓線只作為最其次的佈設方案;

6.2. 向公眾告知使用移動電話和無繩電話存在潛在健康危險。建議消費者控制使用無線電話,並利用有線電話撥打耗時較長的電話。

6.3. 儘量限制幼兒和青少年使用移動電話和無线電話,並應當緊急禁止電信公司以兒童為對象的市場銷售。

6.4. 要求生產商為每部移動電話及每部無线電話提供免提設備(如話筒和耳機)。

6.5 通過防護距離並對人和設備採取遮罩措施,以保護工人免受電磁輻射發射設備影響。

6.6. 對通信天線及發射塔架設位置進行合理規劃,從而使人群暴露量降至最低。移動電話基站應在地方規劃局進行登記,並利用電腦製圖技術告知公眾可能存在的電磁輻射暴露。對遍及全市範圍的無線存取系統,(如、WIMAX<微波存取全球互通>、通過電纜或電源線連接的寬頻及其他相應的技術系統等),在安裝之前應當首先向公眾告知其潛在電磁輻射暴露,如果已安裝上述設備,市政府應當確保全體居民均能查閱到上述健康影響資訊,並應負責對上述資訊進行動態更新。

6.7. 應當在城市、公共建築(學校、醫院及居民區),及公共交通工具指定無線電清潔區域,以便對電磁輻射敏感的人能夠進入上述場所。

7. ICEMS(3)願意協助當地政府制訂電磁輻射研究規劃。ICEMS宣導設計具有地區聚集性疾病的臨床研究方案和流行病學調查方案,如過敏反應、其他疾病或對電磁輻射敏感等, 並且保留預防性干預措施效果的相關檔。ICEMS宣導科學研究合作並對研究結果進行評估。

我們(下述署名的科學家)同意協助促進電磁輻射研究並通過採取謹慎的預防原則協助制訂保護公眾健康的對策。
簽名:
Fiorella Belpoggi, 歐洲腫瘤及環境科學基金會
B.Ramazzini, 義大利博洛尼亞
Carl F. Blackman, 生物電磁協會主席(1990~1991)美國新赫里多尼亞
Martin Blank, 美國紐約哥倫比亞大學生理系
Natalia Bobkova, 莫斯科細胞生物物理所
Francesco Boella, 義大利國立職業安全所
曹兆進, 中國疾病預防控制中心環境與健康相關產品安全所
Sandro D.Allessandro, 醫生,義大利貝內文托市長(2001~2006)
Enrico D.Emilia, 義大利國立職業安全所
Emilio Del Giuduice, 義大利國立核子物理所
Antonella De Ninno,義大利國家能源、環境和技術局
Alvaro A. De Salles, 巴西裏奧格蘭德聯邦大學
Livio Giuliani, 義大利Camerino 大學國立職業安全所
Yury Grigoryev, 生物物理學院,俄羅斯NIERP主席
Settimo Grimaldi, 義大利國立研究學院神經生物和分子醫學所
Lennart Hardell, 瑞典醫學院腫瘤系
Magda Havas, 加拿大安大略特倫特大學環境與資源研究院
Gerard Hyland, 英國瓦立克大學; 德國國際生物物理研究所;英國電磁輻射監護協會
Olle Johansson, 瑞典Karolinska 學院神經科學系皮膚試驗室
Michael Kundi, 奧地利維也納醫科大學環境衛生所所長
Henry C. Lai, 美國西雅圖華盛頓大學生物工程系
Mario Ledda, 義大利羅馬國家研究顧問委員會神經生物和分子醫學所
Yi-Ping Lin, 臺灣國立大學健康風險評估與對策中心
Antonella Lisi, 義大利羅馬國家研究顧問委員會神經生物和分子醫學所
Fiorenzo Marinelli, 義大利博洛尼亞國家研究顧問委員會細胞免疫所
Elihu Richter, 以色列希伯來大學職業和環境醫學院院長
Emanuela Rosola, 義大利羅馬國家研究顧問委員會神經生物和分子醫學所
Leif Salford, 瑞典蘭德大學神經外科系主任
Nesrin Seyhan, 土耳其安卡拉Gazi NIRP中心生物物理系主任
Morando Soffritti, 義大利博洛尼亞歐洲腫瘤及環境科學基金會主任
Stanislaw Szmigielski, 波蘭軍事衛生與流行病研究所
Mikhail Zhadin, 莫斯科細胞生物物理所

決議發佈日期:2006年9月19日

更多資訊請與義大利Elizabeth Kelley 聯繫,Elizabeth Kelley是國際電磁輻射安全委員會管理秘書。
Email: info@icems.eu
網址:www.icems.eu

注釋:
1. 本決議中EMF是指0~300 GHz的電磁波.
2. 預防原則是指當有跡象表明可能存在不利影響時,儘管這種影響效應還不確定,
但是不採取任何措施的風險可能會遠遠大於採取控制措施的風險,預防原則將
舉證責任從風險懷疑者轉移到風險低估者。
3. 國際電磁輻射安全委員會,請登陸www.icems.eu. 查閱相關資訊。


卡塔尼亞(CATANIA)決議

2002年9月13~14日在義大利卡塔尼亞市(Catania)由義大利國立預防和職業安全研究所(ISPESL) 、維也納大學和卡塔尼亞市聯合舉辦了“電磁場研究現狀——科學和法律問題” 國際會議,與會科學家達成以下共識:

1. 流行病學和體內外實驗研究表明在實際暴露水準電磁場產生的生物學效應中包括一些有害生物學效應。

2. 我們不接受低強度電磁輻射不會與組織相互作用的觀點。

3. 有些健康效應是由低於現行的ICNIRP(國際非電磁輻射防護委員會)指南、IEEE(美國電氣及電子工程師學會)指南和歐盟推薦的暴露限值水準的電磁輻射暴露引起的,其健康效應機制是可能存在的;

4. 電磁輻射健康影響研究要求電磁輻射預防策略應當依據預防為主的原則。預防原則有時也可指謹慎規避和謹慎使用。

5. 我們意識到在生物學效應研究、物理效應研究及電磁輻射健康影響研究方面存在知識缺口,這些知識缺口需要進行額外獨立的研究。

6. 下列署名的科學家同意成立一個國際科學委員會,以促進電磁輻射公眾健康影響防護研究,並根據預防原則為電磁輻射的風險評估、預防、管理和資訊交流建立科學基礎。

簽名:
Fiorella Belpoggi, 義大利博洛尼亞
Carl F. Blackman, 生物電磁協會主席(1990~1991)美國新赫里多尼亞
Martin Blank, 美國紐約哥倫比亞大學生理系
Emilio Del Giudice, 義大利米蘭國立核子物理所
Livio Giuliani, 義大利Camerino 大學國立職業安全所
Settimio Grimaldi, 義大利CNR神經生物和分子醫學所
Lennart Hardell, 瑞典醫學院腫瘤系
Michael Kundi, 奧地利維也納醫科大學環境衛生所所長
Henry Lai, 美國華盛頓大學生物工程系
Abraham R. Liboff, 美國奧克蘭大學物理系
Wolfgang L?scher, 德國漢諾威獸醫學院藥理、毒理、藥劑系
Kjell Hansson Mild, 瑞典職業學院,生物電磁協會主席(1996~1997)
Wilhelm Mosg?ller, 奧地利維也納大學癌症研究所
Elihu D. Richter, 以色列希伯來大學公共衛生學院職業和環境醫學室主任
Umberto Scapagnini, 義大利卡塔尼亞大學神經藥理系,歐洲議會研究委員會成員
Stanislaw Szmigielski, 波蘭軍事衛生與流行病研究所


更新日期:2008/05/28