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BioInitiative's Hardell Finds Evidence Linking Gliomas and Heavy Cell Phone Use

* Reuters is not responsible for the content in this press release.

Fri May 23, 2008 12:15am EDT

OREBRO, Sweden--(Business Wire)--
Dr. Lennart Hardell, MD, oncologist at the University Hospital,
Orebro, Sweden, and an expert on cell phone use and brain tumors,
believes there is strong evidence pointing to glioma brain tumors in
people who are heavy users of cell phones over a period of years.
Heavy cell phone use is defined as more than 2000 lifetime hours.
Hardell's review of studies of cell phone use and brain tumor
incidence is found at:
http://www.bioinitiative.org/report/docs/section_10.pdf

   Hardell says:

   Long-term use of cell and cordless phones is
associated with increased risk for glioma, a type of malignant brain
tumor. For those who have used a cell phone predominantly on one side
of the head (ipsilateral use) over a period of ten years or more,
there is a consistently elevated risk of glioma.

   Microwave News has tracked the results of the studies that make up
the 13-country Interphone Project. Several have found an increased
risk of glioma, like the type diagnosed in Senator Ted Kennedy, in
people who used cell phones for 10 years or more. See:
http://www.microwavenews.com/docs/SetInterphonefree.pdf The French
Interphone Study pointed to increased risk at only 260-467 hours of
total lifetime use.

   It is not the first time the disclosure that a prominent public
figure fighting this deadly diagnosis has raised the question of
whether long-term use of cell phones is linked to brain tumors. The
death of attorney Johnnie L. Cochran prompted his neurosurgeon, Dr.
Keith Black, MD of Cedars Sinai Hospital, to make the connection.
Black said he believes there was a relationship between Cochran's
heavy cell phone use and his death from a glioma in 2005.

The EMR Policy Institute
Janet Newton, (802)426-3035
JNewton@emrpolicy.org

Copyright Business Wire 2008
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