First
Study of Phone Mast Dangers
By
Victoria Fletcher, Evening Standard
22 November 2004
The
Government is to investigate whether living near mobile phone masts
can
damage health, it is revealed today.
The Department of Health is backing Britain's first study into
whether the radio waves emitted from the base stations trigger symptoms
including headaches, dizziness and memory loss.
The two-year project at Essex University is being jointly funded by
the health department and the mobile phone industry at a cost of more
than £100,000.
Millions of families in Britain are concerned about the health effects
of the thousands of masts near homes and school playgrounds. Research
by the Evening Standard showed as many as 80 masts stand within 500
feet of each school in central London. Britain now has more than 35,000
masts.
Scores of people who live near masts have reported frightening neurological
symptoms.
Professor Simon Saunders, one of the team of scientists involved in
the study, said: "At present, there is no documented evidence of
a link between health and exposure. But there may be some people who
are hypersensitive to the signals these masts produce. That is what
the experiment aims to find out."
About 200 people who believe they are sensitive to radiowaves, as well
as volunteers who do not, will alternately be exposed to radio waves
from conventional base stations, from the more advanced 3G masts, and
to no radiowaves at all. They will be asked to note down any health
effects they notice.
The study will not look at whether the masts could cause leukaemia or
other cancers.
Dr Mike Clarke from the National Radiological Protection Board said
the research was vital.
"There has been an awful lot of research looking at the radiation
from mobile phone handsets. But there has been nothing to look at the
effect that the constant, lowlevel radiation from masts can have on
health. This piece of work is vital to fill that gap," he said.
Handsets emit far more radiation than masts but they are only held close
to the head for a few minutes at a time, whereas the radiation from
base stations is constant.
To date, scientists worldwide have failed to find conclusive evidence
that mobile phones can cause cancer, brain damage or any other form
of illness.
But they believe that more research is still needed before an absolute
assurance can be given to the public.
Electricity pylons - which also emit radio waves - have already been
linked with an increased rate of childhood leukaemia, raising concerns
over mobile phone masts.
At present, most mobile phone masts erected in Britain produce very
low electromagnetic fields, often less than 0.2 per cent of the amount
considered a potential threat to health.