May 3, 2008

EMFPHOBIA: Hybrids and Cellphone EMF CAUSE CANCER?

REMEMBER WHEN POWER LINES CAUSED CANCER?
EMF stopped causing cancer in 1997, but no one bothered to tell Jim  Motavalli, who wrote an Automobile column in the Sunday New York Times about the risks of EMF in hybrids.  According to Motavalli the National Cancer Institute studied the cancer risks associated with electromagnetic fields.  And so it did - but it couldn't find any.  You might think Motavalli would at least check the Archives of the New York Times.  On July 3, 1997, the day the massive four-year NCI study of power lines and cancer appeared in the New England Journal of Medicine, Gina Kolata reported in the Times that the study was unambiguous and found no health effects associated with electromagnetic fields.  An editorial in the same issue of the Journal put it in perspective: "Hundreds of millions of dollars have gone into studies that never had much promise of finding a way to prevent the tragedy of cancer in children.  It is time to stop wasting our research resources."  It all began in 1979 when Nancy Wertheimer, an unemployed epidemiologist, and her friend Ed Leeper, drove around Denver looking for common environmental factors in the homes of childhood victims of leukemia.  It practically jumped out at them - every home had electricity.  Their study was so flawed it would have been laughed off but for Paul Brodeur, a scientifically-ignorant writer for The New Yorker.  He wrote a series of terrifying articles about power lines and cancer that were collected in a 1989 book, Currents of Death.
 
From  bobpark (Thanks Bob)