The American Academy of Pediatrics is supporting pending
legislation that would require new research into the safety of cell phone
radiation, especially for children; require safety standards that protect
children and other vulnerable populations; and impose new labeling requirements
for them.

The bill’s endorsement by the nation’s largest organization of physicians
specializing in children’s health “should be a wake-up call” to Congress and
the public, Renee Sharp, senior scientist for the Environmental Working Group,
said in a statement.
“We are pleased that this well-regarded doctors’ group has joined the
mounting calls for legislation aimed at ensuring cell phone safety,” said Sharp.
“The science is not definitive that exposure to cell phone radiation can cause
cancer or other health problems, but there is real reason for concern. Given
their widespread use by children and adults, the federal government needs to be
doing all it can to ensure that cell phones are safe and that consumers are
informed. The government’s efforts have fallen woefully short.”
The Cell Phone Right to Know Act would expand research on the potential
health effects of cell phone radiation, require the Federal Communications
Commission to update its limited and outdated safety standards, and mandate
better labeling and right-to-know measures.
The American Academy of Pediatrics is the first physicians’ organization to
take a position on the bill.
In May 2011, the World Health Organization’s International Agency for
Research on Cancer classified
cell phone radiation as “possibly carcinogenic to humans” based on evidence
linking it to an increased risk of glioma, a malignant type of brain cancer,
she said.
Although most scientific and public attention on the issue of the safety of
cell phone radiation has focused on evidence suggesting an increased risk of
brain tumors, research is pointing to a new concern – sperm damage.
In a review of scientific literature released in June, the EWG found 10 human studies that
have identified a variety of changes in sperm exposed to cell phone radiation.
One example: men who carried their phones in a pocket or on a belt were more
likely to have lower sperm counts and/or more inactive or less mobile sperm.
In addition to calling for updated safety standards, the EWG has lobbied for
more information be available to consumers about cell phone radiation exposure,
supported right-to-know initiatives, and recommended steps that individual cell
phone users can take to decrease their exposure, such as using a headset and
texting rather than talking.
See the EWG’s “Guide for to Safer Cell Phone Use” for more information.




