Kids on Cell Phones
According to France Telecom, the brains of young children absorb twice as much as radio frequency energy from a cell phone as those of adults. Their research appears in the July 7 issue of the journal “Physics in Medicine and Biology” and it confirms that peripheral brain tissues of children seem to be higher exposed than the peripheral brain tissue of adults.” “Children are not simply small adults,” Joe Wiart, the research director, explained in an interview with “Microwave News.”
“Their skin and their skulls are thinner than those of adults, and their ears are smaller too,” he said. “Given these differences, the higher SAR for children is not surprising.”
SAR stands for specific absorption rate, a measure of the rate at which radio frequency energy is absorbed by the body.
These new findings apply to children who are eight years old or younger. Above the age of eight, the SARs in children are much like those of adults, according to Wiart.
“I agree with Joe,” said Niels Kuster, the director of the IT’IS Foundation in Zurich. A team led by Kuster and Andreas Christ recently completed a project for the German Federal Office of Radiation Protection, which like Wiart, found that regions of the brains of young children can have exposures that are twice those of adults - or even higher.
Even more striking, Kuster and Christ concluded that the “exposure of the bone marrow of children can exceed that of adults by about a factor of ten.”
They also report that children’s eyes are more highly exposed that those of adults.
Whether or not children are at a greater health risk than adults has been debated since at least the year 2000, when a UK panel chaired by Sir William Stewart advised that parents limit their children’s use of mobile phones.
Since then, other government groups, especially those in France and Germany, have issued similar precautionary recommendations.

Write a Comment