The Mobile Revolution: How Cell Phones CHANGED our Lives Forever | ENDEVR Documentary
This documentary provides a fascinating reminder of life just a decade ago.
Research shows adverse effects from cell phone radiation.
- A Yale study funded by the American Cancer Society found elevated thyroid cancer risk in heavy cell phone users with specific genetic susceptibilities (Luo et al. 2020).
- A 2020 meta-analysis found that cell phone users’ cumulative cell phone use over 1000 hours statistically significantly increased tumor risk (Choi et al 2020).
- Several publications assert that the current body of evidence has significantly increased and cell phone radiation is proven Group 1 human carcinogen (Miller et al 2018, Peleg et al 2018 Carlberg and Hardell 2017, Belpomme et al 2018,)
- The Environmental Working Group published a landmark study analyzing the findings of tumor and heart damage in the National Toxicology Program study and concluded that FCC limits should be strengthened by 200 to 400 times to protect children according to current risk assessment guidelines (Uche 2021).
- Research has found women who carry cellphones in the bra have elevated breast cancer risk (West et al 2013, Shih et al 2020).
Reproduction
- Systematic reviews associate RF-EMF with impacts on sperm ( Kim et al., 2021, Yu et al., 2021) and decreased testosterone (Maluin et al., 2021) leading many researchers to conclude “it is recommended to keep the cell phone away from the pelvis as much as possible (Hassanzadeh-Taheri et al, 2021).
Nervous System Impacts
- The American Academy of Pediatrics has long recommended that U.S. wireless radiation regulations be updated to protect children and pregnant women as the U.S., regulations are based on an adult male (a 220-pound man’s head, not a child’s smaller head). (Ghandi 2012, AAP 2012 & 2013).
- Children absorb proportionately higher doses in the eyes and critical brain regions than adults due to their smaller heads, thinner skulls, and higher water content (Ferreira and de Salles 2015, Fernandez et al. 2018).
- Children have more active stem cells and stem cells have been found to be more sensitive to exposure (Markova et al, 2010, Williams et al. 2006).
- Research on pregnant women has linked prenatal cell phone radiation exposure to emotional/behavioral problems (Divan et al 2012, Sudan et al 2016) and hyperactivity (Birks et al., 2017) in their children.
- Wireless exposure is linked to brain damage (Tan et al., 2017), memory problems (Shahin et al., 2018), hyperactivity (Aldad et al., 2012), cellular impacts (Fragopoulou et al., 2018), and impacts on brain regions critical to memory and learning (Dasdag et al 2015, Shahin et al, 2018, Obajuluwa et al 2017, Tan et al., 2021, Hasan et al., 2021).
- Cell phone radiation has been found to alter brain activity (Volkow et al 2011, Bin et al 2014), impact neurotransmitters, and alter neuron development (Kaplan et al, 2015, Li et al 2021, Chen et al 2021).
- A replication study on teenagers found memory damage to the area of the brain most exposed to cell phone radiation when the phone is held close to the head (Foerster et al 2018).