CHILDREN under the
age of eight should not use mobile phones,
parents were advised last night after an
authoritative report linked heavy use to ear and
brain tumours and concluded that the risks had
been underestimated by most scientists.
Professor Sir William Stewart, chairman of
the National Radiological Protection Board
(NRPB), said that evidence of potentially
harmful effects had become more persuasive over
the past five years.
The news prompted
calls for phones to carry health warnings and
panic in parts of the industry. One British
manufacturer immediately suspended a model aimed
at four to eight-year-olds.
The number of mobiles in Britain has doubled
to 50 million since the first
government-sponsored report in 2000. The number
of children aged between five and nine using
mobiles has increased fivefold in the same
period.
In his report, Mobile Phones and
Health, Sir William said that four studies
have caused concern. One ten-year study in
Sweden suggests that heavy mobile users are more
prone to non-malignant tumours in the ear and
brain while a Dutch study had suggested changes
in cognitive function. A German study has hinted
at an increase in cancer around base stations,
while a project supported by the EU had shown
evidence of cell damage from fields typical of
those of mobile phones.
“All of these studies have yet to be
replicated and are of varying quality but we
can’t dismiss them out of hand,” Sir William
said. If there was a health risk — which
remained unproven — it would have a greater
effect on the young than on older people, he
added.
For children aged between 8 and 14, parents
had to make their own judgments about the risks
and benefits. “I can’t believe that for three to
eight year-olds they can be readily justified,”
he said.
David Hart, general secretary of the National
Association of Headteachers, called last night
for a ban on mobiles in schools.
Mobile phone companies reacted furiously,
saying that the report fanned public concern
without presenting new research. The youth
market is highly lucrative because teenagers are
more likely to use video downloads and other
services.
The World Health Organisation is preparing to
publish an international report, drawing on
hundreds of studies conducted over a decade,
which many hope will give a definitive judgment
on mobile phone safety.
The board’s report says that while there is a
lack of hard information of damage to health,
the approach should be precautionary. Sir
William said: “Just because there are 50 million
of them out there doesn’t mean they are
absolutely safe.”
One school in the North East has begun using
mobile scanners to prevent pupils using mobiles
in class. “Outside college hours it is up to
parents, but in our care if mobiles are found on
children, they are confiscated and returned to
the parents,” David Riden, vice principal of
Tollbar Business and Enterprise College in New
Waltham, said.
One group that appears to target young users
is Richard Branson’s Virgin Mobile, which
derives much of its revenue from the 16s-35s
market. It denies targeting under 16s but has
cornered a large slice of the youth market with
cheap voice and text messages.
HEALTH RISK
Acoustic neuromas are benign tumours of the
acoustic nerve
A study in Sweden has shown that they are
twice as common in mobile phone users