Preface: This is something that the good Dr. Santosh Helekar has already 
written about. The following article from a well know oncologist from a very 
well respected hospital - basically supports what Santoshbab has stated.
I post it here for the record.
good wishes
jose colaco
http://www.medscape.com/viewarticle/743916?src=mp&spon=9  [ Medscape members 
can also access the Audio-Video presentation.

Membership is free and I would recommend it to those who prefer to be kept 
informed via their e-browser]
============== From Medscape =================
Hello. My name is John Maris, and I'm Chief of the Division of Oncology at The 
Children's Hospital in Philadelphia (CHOP). Today I would like to talk to you 
about a recent report on cell phones and the potential that they might cause 
cancer.
This has received a lot of press, and this is one in a series of press releases 
about the potential of cell phones to cause cancer. What I want to say is: 
There is nothing at all to be worried about. As a cancer researcher and someone 
who spends a lot of time thinking about what might cause cancer, I applaud the 
World Health Organization for pulling together a report and asking for more 
information and data to be able to study this. I think that the way in which 
that has been spun in the media -- that cell phones can cause cancer or that 
there is a concern among experts that cell phones cause cancer -- is overblown. 
What I really want to drive home is that there is nothing at all to be 
concerned about.
When we think about what causes cancer, one of the first questions we need to 
ask ourselves is: Is it plausible? Is there a realistic or even little bit of 
an explanation of a cause and effect? Cell phones are used very commonly; there 
is a concern that cancer incidences might be increasing, so it is natural to 
think that these devices that we spend a lot of time with these days might have 
a harmful effect.
For a long time, people thought that cigarettes, which became a very common 
part of everyday life, were not harmful and, despite some increasing concern 
for a long time, people denied that. So, are cell phones similar to the 
cigarette or to tobacco? The answer is no. Smoking causes irritation that has a 
carcinogenic effect, and there is a biologically plausible explanation for how 
smoking could cause harm.
Radio waves that come from a cell phone are low energy. Very good research has 
shown that it is a million times lower, literally a million times lower, than 
the energy that is necessary to damage DNA genetic material and cause mutation 
and cancer. There is no known biologically plausible way that these devices and 
the frequency of energy that they emit, which is the same as that which comes 
from the radio waves that bombard us every day as we listen to our radios, can 
damage DNA.
Could there be another reason? There is no reason that can be surmised, and, 
more importantly, there have been dozens and dozens of studies in test tubes, 
in animal models, and -- most importantly -- in human beings that have all 
refuted the hypothesis that these things can hurt you.
The World Health Organization evaluated a very, very large study that looked at 
thousands and thousands of cell phone users. There was the inability to 
definitely say that these devices were not associated with cancer in this very 
large group of patients because it is a complicated thing to study and relied 
on phone interviews and not actual real observations. The World Health 
Organization released a cautionary statement to say that we just need more 
information. That does not mean that cell phones cause cancer. There is nothing 
that we might need to change in our everyday lives, and I applaud the effort to 
get more data, but we have nothing to be concerned about.
Thank you for your attention.

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