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Cellphones Communications Medicine

Doubts Raised About Cellphone Cancer Study (vox.com) 100

Vox is strongly criticizing coverage of a supposed link between cellphones and cancer suggested by a new study, calling it "a breathtaking example of irresponsible science hype." An anonymous reader writes: A professor and research monitoring administrator at an American medical school reported that to get their results, the researchers "exposed pregnant rats to whole body CDMA- and GSM-modulated radiofrequency radiation, for 9 hours a day, 7 days a week," and the results were seen only with CDMA (but not GSM-modulated) radiofrequency. "[F]alse positives are very likely. The cancer difference was only seen in females, not males. The incidence of brain cancer in the exposed groups was well within the historical range. There's no clear dose response..."
An emeritus professor of applied statistics at the Open University in Britain also called the study "statistically underpowered..." according to Vox. "Not enough animals were used to allow the researchers to have a good chance of detecting a risk from radiofrequency radiation of the size one might plausibly expect."
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Doubts Raised About Cellphone Cancer Study

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  • by Anonymous Coward

    ... I'm far more concerned with the rat bastard who knocked me up.

  • shoulda known
  • Vox (Score:5, Interesting)

    by PopeRatzo ( 965947 ) on Sunday May 29, 2016 @06:44PM (#52207459) Journal

    Vox is strongly criticizing coverage of a supposed link between cellphones and cancer

    Vox is a highly-leveraged company that makes money with a news site that's designed for use on mobile devices. What the fuck you think they're gonna say?

    Plus, Vox is the absolute ugliest news site every on the internet. I'm not joking. If you visit their page, be careful ow whiplash when you involuntarily turn your head away in horror. And their stock in trade are these hot-take "explainer cardstacks" which is some jargon bullshit for a web page with almost no information that prompts you to click on many other pages in order to read the whole story, which inevitably turns out to be disappointing, with mostly pictures and great big infographics without labels that make you come away feeling like you learned something when in fact you are stupider than when you started.

    A bunch of refugees from other hipster publications started Vox, and they stand as a shining example of bad journalism, bad design and a bad business model.

    • OK, I just realized that there are some of you who may believe that I'm overdoing my criticism of vox.com, so I'm going to post a story from their motherfucking front page today. It's an "explainer cardstack" about a meme that I guarantee you have not heard of or seen if you are out of junior high school. A news story about a meme.

      Imagine, these are people with advanced degrees in journalism who are writing this shit.

      http://www.vox.com/2016/5/27/1... [vox.com]

      • It's an "explainer cardstack" about a meme that I guarantee you have not heard of or seen if you are out of junior high school.

        Sorry, I get some of my best memes (one might say "dankest", if they were some kind of retard) from someone who talks like they're still in junior high school. So alas, I do know waddup. And this is one of the dumbest memes that evar happened.

        • So alas, I do know waddup.

          You show courage in admitting that. I salute you.

          I like memes as much as the next Pepe, but damn, can you imagine the notion that a group of journalists believed that they needed to explain THIS ONE to people?

      • Re:Vox (Score:5, Insightful)

        by ArmoredDragon ( 3450605 ) on Sunday May 29, 2016 @07:14PM (#52207613)

        A bullshit study is a bullshit study, no matter who calls out the fact that it is bullshit. The fact that this only happens to the males and not the females is basically a dead ringer for it being a part of the rat's genome and that it's not being influenced by any environmental or other outside factors. I'm not even a scientist and that fact sticks out like a sore thumb to me. Then when you read deeper into the methodology used, and they didn't even use enough subjects to be able to come anywhere close to being able to meet statistical significance, that this is just another one of those bogus health related studies that come around every now and then because somebody is ideologically opposed to something everybody does or uses, and sets out to prove a point rather than to investigate. This is similar to studies that come around every now and then to attempt to prove that take your pick of any one of meat, GMO, vaccination, or aspartame is bad for you.

        • Re:Vox (Score:4, Interesting)

          by Dutch Gun ( 899105 ) on Sunday May 29, 2016 @11:32PM (#52208727)

          I also find it slightly ironic that Slashdot first links to said bullshit study the other day (in which many people rightly call out that it's complete crap), and then posts this a few days later, as if they didn't contribute to the original study's publicity.

          I mean, I get it, Slashdot is just a news aggregator, but I really wish they could find more reliable news sources to draw from in the first place, rather than having to post the same story twice: first sensationalizing, then debunking.

        • Why the emo?

          From the study:
          "In the heart, exposure to GSM or CDMA modulations of RFR in male rats resulted in a statistically significant, positive trend in the incidence of schwannomas. "

          One of its conclusions:
          "Under the conditions of these 2-year studies, the hyperplastic lesions and glial cell neoplasms of the heart and brain observed in male rats are considered likely the result of whole-body exposures to GSM- or CDMA-modulated RFR."

          One of the three reviewers (all three of whom agreed with the study's c

          • Why the emo?

            If something is bullshit, I'm going to call it bullshit. There's no emotion in it, it's just how I'm calling it. What term would you prefer I use instead? Bologna? I just like using the word bullshit.

            From the study:
            "In the heart, exposure to GSM or CDMA modulations of RFR in male rats resulted in a statistically significant, positive trend in the incidence of schwannomas. "

            One of its conclusions:
            "Under the conditions of these 2-year studies, the hyperplastic lesions and glial cell neoplasms of the heart and brain observed in male rats are considered likely the result of whole-body exposures to GSM- or CDMA-modulated RFR."

            One of the three reviewers (all three of whom agreed with the study's conclusions):
            https://cvm.ncsu.edu/directory [ncsu.edu]... [ncsu.edu]

            What they are saying could well be true.

            I think you're not quite getting what the reviewers were agreeing with.

            The female rats were exposed to the same thing, and yet they didn't have any of that happen to them. At the end of the day, what's fundamentally different from male and female? In the case of mammals in particular, it's fundamentally genetic

      • Re:Vox (Score:4, Informative)

        by Xenographic ( 557057 ) on Sunday May 29, 2016 @09:09PM (#52208155) Journal

        > OK, I just realized that there are some of you who may believe that I'm overdoing my criticism of vox.com, so I'm going to post a story from their motherfucking front page today

        That makes them better than Mother Jones (reporter of the original story) who has a "meme of the day" then, no?

        http://www.motherjones.com/kev... [motherjones.com]

        I'm curious as to how RF causes cancer only in *male* rats and why they live longer anyhow, or why the middle exposure group tended to have zero rats with cancer, rather than the low exposure groups, which had about as much cancer as the high exposure groups. Frankly, from reading the data reported in the study (you all did that... right?), all I could help think there's no clear pattern here. It really looks like the noise is larger than the effects, given all the 'anomalous' zero samples assuming the hypothesis that it really does cause cancer.

        • I'm curious as to how RF causes cancer only in *male* rats and why they live longer anyhow, or why the middle exposure group tended to have zero rats with cancer

          Don't get me wrong, I'm not saying exposure to RF causes cancer. I'm saying exposure to Vox causes cancer.

          However, that being said, if there's one thing that should cause cancer in a just universe, it's cell phone usage.

    • Vox is strongly criticizing coverage of a supposed link between cellphones and cancer

      Vox is a highly-leveraged company that makes money with a news site that's designed for use on mobile devices. What the fuck you think they're gonna say?

      That strikes me as a bit of a stretch as far as conflicts of interest go.

      Plus, Vox is the absolute ugliest news site every on the internet. I'm not joking. If you visit their page, be careful ow whiplash when you involuntarily turn your head away in horror. And their stock in trade are these hot-take "explainer cardstacks" which is some jargon bullshit for a web page with almost no information that prompts you to click on many other pages in order to read the whole story, which inevitably turns out to be disappointing, with mostly pictures and great big infographics without labels that make you come away feeling like you learned something when in fact you are stupider than when you started.

      A bunch of refugees from other hipster publications started Vox, and they stand as a shining example of bad journalism, bad design and a bad business model.

      You think they have an ugly website and therefore their reporting on the cellphone study is wrong??

      Honestly I read a fair bit of Vox. I haven't looked at the card stacks but I think they're intended as a very high level basic overview (in case you're completely ignorant of the subject) but the stories, aside from their annoying click baity design, are generally pretty solid. They essentially come at things with a wonky left-leaning per

      • You think they have an ugly website and therefore their reporting on the cellphone study is wrong??

        No, those are two separate conditions. The first is true and the second is false. My wanting cell phones to cause cancer is not going to make it so.

        However, that Vox is an ugly website is not a matter of opinion.

        If anyone doesn't believe me, here, go look for yourself. I want someone here to come back and tell us that it's not an ugly website. If one person (not an AC) believes that this is a well-designed

        • You think they have an ugly website and therefore their reporting on the cellphone study is wrong??

          No, those are two separate conditions. The first is true and the second is false. My wanting cell phones to cause cancer is not going to make it so.

          Well your claim that they did bad journalism seemed predicated on the idea their design was poor.

          However, that Vox is an ugly website is not a matter of opinion.

          If anyone doesn't believe me, here, go look for yourself. I want someone here to come back and tell us that it's not an ugly website. If one person (not an AC) believes that this is a well-designed and attractive website, I will retract my words and refund your money.

          http://www.vox.com/ [vox.com]

          Fine, I think it's good.

          Structurally the main page is a bit of a mess conflating their big current stories and topics but every site does that. If I click on one of the stories it's fairly clean text and all on one page, I'd say that's well above average.

          The cards are a new idea, I don't know if they're a good one, but they seem well executed.

          The only issue I can see is they've gone away from the traditional new

    • by Socguy ( 933973 )
      Here's why I rarely come to /. anymore. First comment is nothing but an ad hominem attack, yet gets an 'insightful' rating.
      • Here's why I rarely come to /. anymore.

        I know I speak for everyone when I say how much you've been missed.

  • Funny, I thought (Score:5, Insightful)

    by John Smith ( 4340437 ) on Sunday May 29, 2016 @07:11PM (#52207599)
    That 1, it was the male rats affected, and two, those rats actually lived longer. So we should see headlines like this: Constant Cell Phone Use Lengthens Lifespan (in men)
  • by Okian Warrior ( 537106 ) on Sunday May 29, 2016 @07:15PM (#52207623) Homepage Journal

    One problem with media reporting today is the perceived need to get emotional involvement.

    In it's economic zeal to get eyeballs on articles, the media has resorted to sensationalizing and emotionalism. They compete for the most outrageous, most shocking headlines in an attempt to lure readers.

    ...and because of this the media has lost all credibility. The readers have wised up, and most don't seem to fall for these tricks any more.

    We only have to look at the Trump campaign to see how this happened. Taking one single issue as an example, we read all about how he hates and has a war against latinos. In reality, he said nothing of the sort, which is 'kinda why he's got such a huge support base right now.

    The media is astonished that his supporters aren't leaving him in droves... he *is* the next Hitler, didn't you know?

    Everything is a crisis, everything is a war on something, everything is a conflict.

    (Note: You can learn how to get around this using this one weird trick! [google.com])

    • One problem with media reporting today is the perceived need to get emotional involvement.

      In it's economic zeal to get eyeballs on articles, the media has resorted to sensationalizing and emotionalism. They compete for the most outrageous, most shocking headlines in an attempt to lure readers.

      ...and because of this the media has lost all credibility. The readers have wised up, and most don't seem to fall for these tricks any more.

      The reason republicans have lost faith in the media is they were watching Fox News and finally realized the media was messing with them.

      We only have to look at the Trump campaign to see how this happened. Taking one single issue as an example, we read all about how he hates and has a war against latinos. In reality, he said nothing of the sort, which is 'kinda why he's got such a huge support base right now.

      The media is astonished that his supporters aren't leaving him in droves... he *is* the next Hitler, didn't you know?

      What's Trump's health care policy? What's his education policy? What's his energy policy? The only time he mentions these is scripted readings of a teleprompter. He doesn't care about them and neither do his supporters.

      There's only two policy areas he ever talks about. Mexicans and Muslims and all the things he'll do to keep them out of the country. And a weird mishmash of

    • One problem with media reporting today is the perceived need to get emotional involvement

      But its the viewers fault. The way news media has become is the same reason shows like honey boo boo, the kardasians and other equivalent crap exists.

      I honestly don't know how this gets changed in our lifetime.

    • by Anonymous Coward

      http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/25738972

  • The journalism.. (Score:5, Insightful)

    by TechyImmigrant ( 175943 ) on Sunday May 29, 2016 @07:20PM (#52207647) Homepage Journal

    was facepalm worthy from the get go.
    But it continues to be facepalm worthy in criticizing the study.

    The study was not worthless. It failed to show a statistically significant link. But it might have. The study was big enough that a real effect would have stuck out like a sore thumb. That it didn't, but some weird weak relationships were seen in fact puts a bound on the maximum size of the problem : I.E. In some contexts (gender, ludicrously powered phone, being a mouse) the effect of cell phone radiation doesn't cause excess tumors over the expected rate with a pretty good confidence.

    The press started out all "OMG! Cell phones cause cancer!!!!". Then after the criticism of the hyperbole they went all "OMG!!! That study was shite!!!". The problem is with the press, not the study.
     

    • by Anonymous Coward

      The study was big enough that a real effect would have stuck out like a sore thumb.

      A real effect would stick out like a sore thumb in society in general, now that people have spent 20 years with cell phones glued to their ears.

      No symptoms = no effect. Seems simple enough.

      • A real effect would stick out like a sore thumb in society in general, now that people have spent 20 years with cell phones glued to their ears.

        You'd think so, but cancer is actually pretty tricky to pin down and the technology and usage patterns of mobile phone usage hasn't remained constant over those 20 years.

        Despite 50 years of outcome improvements, the mortality rate of cancer has remained relatively static. The reason may simply be that people are dying of cancer because they aren't dying of other things, and hence getting old enough to die from cancers that are hard to treat. Moreover, mobile phones were originally mostly car-mounted, and in

        • by larkost ( 79011 )

          You have sited nearly all the examples that would tend to make this argument stronger, but just missed in tying them together:

          1. There are enormous numbers of people who have essentially been participating in a study on radiation exposure. And rough numbers of people with cellphones of varying types are commercially available for pretty much any market you want them for.

          2. There is a pretty good body of information on the number of people who develop cancer, with much the same availability over time and geo

      • The study was big enough that a real effect would have stuck out like a sore thumb.

        A real effect would stick out like a sore thumb in society in general, now that people have spent 20 years with cell phones glued to their ears.

        No symptoms = no effect. Seems simple enough.

        Yes. The epidemiology hasn't come up with anything and epidemiology is great at finding non causal relationships.

    • In a world of 7 billion people, a 0.01% problem has the potential to adversely affect seven hundred thousand people.

      No doubt, cell phones aren't killing a great number of people, but...

    • Re:The journalism.. (Score:4, Interesting)

      by Pseudonym ( 62607 ) on Sunday May 29, 2016 @08:10PM (#52207895)

      You know the worst part, though? The headline of very Slashdot story implies that doubts were raised about the study rather than how it was reported. The mistake is being compounded every time the story is retold.

      (Incidentally, the "statistically underpowered" comment is accurate but irrelevant. The whole point of a small-scale study is to decide whether or not it's worth spending resources on a larger-scale study. Science journalists should know this.)

    • by Anonymous Coward

      Burden of proof is on them. "But maybe" fucking nothing.

  • You must obey the makers of cellphones and wireless carriers!
    Do not question anything they state as fact.
    Do not think for yourself!
    Give up your rational mind.
    Obey!

    • by dcw3 ( 649211 )

      You must obey the makers of cellphones and wireless carriers!
      Do not question anything they state as fact.
      Do not think for yourself!
      Give up your rational mind.
      Obey!

      Forget your meds this morning?

  • by Solandri ( 704621 ) on Sunday May 29, 2016 @11:24PM (#52208685)
    I didn't. :) But just reading the first dozen pages [biorxiv.org]...

    It looks like they broke the test rats into groups with 1.5, 3, and 6 W/kg exposure, CDMA and GSM, male and female. That's 3*2*2 = 12 groups. For the brain section, they looked for two types of tumors. So now they've got 24 groupings that they're searching for possible correlations.

    The statistical significance of the one correlation they found (male, CDMA, 6 W/kg, malignant glioma) was p < 0.05. In other words, due to their limited sample size, just by random chance alone you'd expect such a blip to occur about 1 in 20 times even when there is no real correlation. Well they tried 24 times and got one blip.

    Same thing with the heart results. 24 groupings, one blip with p < 0.05, one blip with p = 0.052. Again, almost exactly what you'd expect by pure chance alone.
  • Rats vs Humans (Score:5, Interesting)

    by MrKaos ( 858439 ) on Sunday May 29, 2016 @11:51PM (#52208793) Journal

    I think the big thing to remember is that humans are walking around making calls with a 1-3W microwave transmitter attached to the side of their head, rats don't. This may not be a lot of power however combined with human habit (left or right side exposure) it is certain to deliver a constant rate of microwave energy almost directly to the brain.

    I've seen someone die from brain cancer and it's bad, so I think it's worth sharing a few things that make it simple to take personal responsibility for your own safety. First, it's your brain, so it is worth protecting as the most valued organ in the body and much more sensitive than the thigh or other large muscle groups or even a hand - so simple habit changes can reduce the risks, whatever they turn out to be.

    Second, don't trust any information from any source that sponsored from an interest in mobile phone sales or use, we've all seen how the tobacco industry behave to protect their business model and revenue stream.

    Once you are aware of the properties of the transmitter and the device it is simple to make minor changes to usage patterns that can also increase the usefullness of the device. At approximately 2.4 Ghz the wavelength is roughly 13cm, which is about the width of a human head, so if you are within one wavelength your head will absorb a portion of the energy from the phone. At 60-180 degrees of the fresnel of transmission into the head, it can vary between >0% to 50% of the power output.

    If the device is pressed up against you will increase the rate of absorbtion due to inductance, this will also cause the device to increase the power output of the to maintain a clear signal, which consequently will increase the rate of exposure to the brain.

    Another thing to factor is if the phone has a wi-fi transmitter operational while you are using it, as this will also contribute to increasing the rate of exposure as it is also a 2.4 Ghz transmitter.

    For every wavelength away from your head the phone is this will reduce the exposure to your brain by increasing orders of magnitude. This might mean you choose to use speaker phone if you have a private moment, or to use the same headphone you are using for music to take the call. Additionally you may find that the battery life of the device is increased and you have less call dropouts as it is no longer increasing its signal output to overcome the effects of the capacitance from the water in your brain to maintain the call connection.

    The long term effects from mobile use will vary however the properties and nature of the device are predictable enough to make simple, unobtrusive changes to usage patterns to avoid being someone who finds out if there is any the hard way. If it means your battery lasts longer, you appear more polite to people and you have better call quality while your use your phone this may be an unexpected benefit of erring on the cautious side.

    • by Hylandr ( 813770 )

      First, it's your brain

      Damn right it is, and I will do what I want with it.

      Second, don't trust any information from any source that sponsored from an interest in ... industry behave to protect their business model and revenue stream.

      This follows for Vaccines, Climatology, Alcoholism, Dairy and Eggs, etc.

      it is simple to make minor changes to usage patterns that can also increase the usefullness of the device.

      Cancer is obviously caused by holding it wrong.

      At approximately 2.4 Ghz the wavelength is roughly 13cm, which is about the width of a human head, so if you are within one wavelength your head will absorb a portion of the energy from the phone. At 60-180 degrees of the fresnel of transmission into the head, it can vary between >0% to 50% of the power output

      Did Shatner whisper that in your ear when he came in your ass?

      or to use the same headphone you are using for music to take the call

      BlueTooth ~~ More RF. Not just microwave. Cook it right !!!

      increasing its signal output to overcome the effects of the capacitance from the water in your brain to maintain the call connection.

      Tinfoil works better.

      >>>
      All in all a great post of genuine concern by someone completely clueless and legitimately thinking they are helping by making shit up.

      It's a disease, seek help and don't post anymore ple

      • by MrKaos ( 858439 )

        Climate change will exist so long as there's money to be made from it.

        Interesting.

        All in all a great post of genuine concern by someone completely clueless and legitimately thinking they are helping by making shit up.

        Is there anything specific you are referring too, or are you speaking to your assumptions?

        • by Hylandr ( 813770 )

          Just because you don't like it doesn't mean it isn't true.

          People *Are* making money off this and it runs through every industry, Tell me, who is *selling* carbon credits and what programs are funded by that money?

          *Crickets*

          Although I have been considering changing my signature to the following:
          It's getting to the point that I instantly interpret ad-hominem attacks as a vocal acceptance of my victory.

          • by MrKaos ( 858439 )

            Do you have anything specific to say about this information:

            At approximately 2.4 Ghz the wavelength is roughly 13cm, which is about the width of a human head, so if you are within one wavelength your head will absorb a portion of the energy from the phone. At 60-180 degrees of the fresnel of transmission into the head, it can vary between >0% to 50% of the power output

            other than:

            Did Shatner whisper that in your ear when he came in your ass?

            because it's getting to the point that I instantly interpret ad-hominem attacks as a vocal acceptance of my victory.

            • by Hylandr ( 813770 )

              "Because Star Trek"

              Just didn't seem as funny, and I was posting well beyond a time I should have been.

              It's funny still, but I will recant that statement as a matter of process rather than content.

              though, you tell me how you would respond to bull-pucky of that nature?

    • by dcw3 ( 649211 )

      Let's just stop the speculation, and look at facts. The number of cases of brain cancer per 100,000 population simply has NOT increased since the introduction of cell phones. In fact, citing the site below...Using statistical models for analysis, rates for new brain and other nervous system cancer cases have been falling on average 0.2% each year over the last 10 years. Do you have statistical evidence to the contrary? If not, then you should stop spreading FUD.

      http://seer.cancer.gov/statfac... [cancer.gov]

      • by MrKaos ( 858439 )

        Let's just stop the speculation, and look at facts.

        They are the operational facts of the devices in question.

        The number of cases of brain cancer per 100,000 population simply has NOT increased since the introduction of cell phones. In fact, citing the site below...Using statistical models for analysis, rates for new brain and other nervous system cancer cases have been falling on average 0.2% each year over the last 10 years.

        http://seer.cancer.gov/statfac... [cancer.gov]

        Thanks for the link, all that means is we have gotten better at isolating causes of brain cancer and avoiding them. It is not evidence about what will happen after habitually using a mobile phone after 20,30,40,50 or however many years. Nor is it evidence that mobile phones are or are not a *source* of brain cancer that has to be eliminated.

        Do you have statistical evidence to the contrary?

        Where did I claim it would cause brain cancer? I don't know what will happen to your brain if you expose it to

  • "a breathtaking example of irresponsible science hype."

    Welcome to Facebook.

  • by account_deleted ( 4530225 ) on Monday May 30, 2016 @07:02AM (#52209813)
    Comment removed based on user account deletion
  • The energy of the radio frequency photons (waves) used in cell phones each have a tiny fraction of the energy (~1 millionth) required to ionize atoms and about (10^(-5)) required to break chemical bonds. There is no physical mechanism for cell phones to cause cancer (well, maybe eating them). The real result is with over 1 billion cell phones in daily use, there's been no uptick in brain cancer rates in recent years.
  • All of the studies purporting to show cancer risk from cellphones are BS. How do we know? Because cellphone use has skyrocketed worldwide in the past 20-30 years with no corresponding increase in brain cancer in humans. It's not a perfectly designed study, but I'm going to trust the natural experiment that's been performed on billions of humans over decades of time rather than the lab experiment that's been carried out on a handful of rats for a much shorter time.

  • Maybe they're confusing cause and effect: people with serious brain cancer are more likely to be talking on their phones all the time!
  • If you are afraid of CDMA-caused cancer, I suggest joining the Church of the Flying Spaghetti Monster; and then don your metallic noodle strainer hat. That'll save ya! (Was a study ever don on Pastafarianists?)

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