Global Health Study: Mobile use does not cause brain cancer

A new review available by the World Health Organization for published evidence has ended in the absence of a link between the use of a cellphone and an increase in the risk of brain cancer. The review, published on Tuesday, found that despite the enormous increase in the use of wireless communication technology, no maintenance in cases of brain cancer has an increase. This even applies to people who make long phone calls, or have used cell phones for more than a decade. The final analysis included 63 studies between 1994 and 2022, and was held by 11 searches from ten countries, including the Australian Radiation Protection Authority. The participant to study, Mark Elwood, a professor of cancerous epidemics at Oakland University in New Zealand, said the review evaluated the impact of radio waves used in cell phones on television, child monitoring devices and radars. He added: “None of the most important issues the study underwent showed an increase in risk.” The review searched brain cancer in adults and children, as well as pituitary and glands of cancer and leukemia, the dangers associated with the use of cellphone, transmitters and broadcasting stations, as well as exposure to the nature of the profession. This review comes in the wake of similar efforts, as the World Health Organization and other international health bodies have already said that there are no conclusive evidence of harmful health effects caused by the radiation used by cell phones but ask for more research. The International Cancer Research Agency currently assesses this radiation as ‘potentially carcinogen’, or from the B2 category, a classification that the agency uses when it cannot exclude a possible link. The Agency’s Advisory Group called for a reassessment of the classification as soon as possible, given the new data issued since its recent evaluation in 2011. The World Health Organization is scheduled to be evaluated in the first quarter of 2025. which it announced that a large number of studies were conducted over the past 20 years, in order to evaluate whether mobile phones have possible health effects, and have not indicated, until now, the existence of any health effects that are warmed by using telephones.