Is wireless hazardous to your health?

18.04.2006
Let's get right to the question: Do cell phones cause brain tumors, any other form of cancer or any other disease? In short, is wireless hazardous to your health?

Let's get right to the answer: No one knows. We can't say whether cell phones, or any other consumer-grade wireless devices, are harmless. Indeed, we do know that certain forms of wireless radiation are quite the opposite. Spend a lot of time in the sun? The ultraviolet (UV) rays your skin is exposed to can cause cancer. We know that. Ditto for X-rays, gamma rays and cosmic rays, to which we are also exposed just by being on this planet.

Well, we also know that the only difference between the known harmful forms of radiation listed above and the microwaves that consumer products use is frequency. Microwaves have a lower frequency than the others listed, but both are forms of electromagnetic radiation. Does frequency (how fast the wave vibrates) make a difference?

Yes, it does. UV waves and the others mentioned above have very, very high frequencies -- hundreds of trillions of cycles per second (terahertz). Microwaves, on the other hand, are comparative slowpokes, with just a few billion cycles per second (gigahertz) at most. Microwaves are nonionizing radiation, while the others are ionizing. That's the important difference between the two.

Ionizing radiation has the necessary properties to cause changes at the atomic and molecular levels. That's what causes cancer with significant exposure. Of course, cancer has lots of other causes, including certain chemicals and one's genetic history. But can significant exposure to nonionizing radiation cause cancer?

We don't know. But the physicians and physicists I've consulted on this question don't think so. There are other related unanswered questions as well, such as whether the magnetic component of electromagnetic radiation can cause disease. Anyone who's ever had an MRI (magnetic resonance imaging) test has been exposed to one of the most powerful magnetic fields known, and I've heard nothing about such exposure being harmful in any way.