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Say What? CDC Flip-Flops on Cell Phone Danger

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Tuesday, September 2, 2014   

SIOUX FALLS, S.D. - The Centers for Disease Control became the first federal agency to acknowledge health risks from cell phone use and then suddenly backtracked. Sometime before early June the CDC posted significant new wording in a "Frequently Asked Questions" section on its website. To the question, "Do cell phones cause health problems in children?" it read, "It's too soon to know for sure," and went on to say children will have more exposure over a lifetime growing up with cell phones.

But last week, that was changed to simply, "It's not known if cell phone use by children can cause health problems." Jim Turner, board chair of Citizens for Health and a public interest lawyer, speculates the changes were triggered either by industry lobbyists, government officials, or both.

"CDC wasn't sitting over there and put the thing up the first time, and then they said, 'Oh, wait a minute, let's take it down,'" Turner says. "Somebody alerted them that they wanted it down or there was going to be trouble."

The CDC has not returned a request for comment. The agency made other back-tracking language changes regarding possible cancer and other health risks from cell phones.

Louis Slesin, editor and publisher of Microwave News, says the softening of the CDC's language is puzzling because, as he puts it, they've got "bigger fish to fry."

"With Ebola in Africa and all the things going on it's really quite remarkable someone made the effort to change something that was really very, very minor," says Slesin. "All it was saying was, 'We think there's something to this. Don't discount it.' That's all they were really saying."

The CDC website also originally said, "We recommended caution in cell phone usage," but has removed the "we." Turner says even the softened statement is an eye-opener.

"For the CDC to say that 'some organizations recommend caution in cell phone use' is, in and of itself, a very, very significant statement."

Slesin says he can't understand, and the CDC won't tell him, why they backed away from acknowledging several international studies that suggest health risks from cell phones.

"This is just telling people, 'We see the data. There are some issues here that need to be worked out. Be cautious until it is,'" says Slesin. "The fact they backed away from that is really quite extraordinary."

The agency also says in their FAQs "more research is needed." Turner says that statement alone should spur the nation's nearly 328-million cell phone users to learn more about the potential hazards and what they might do to lessen them.



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