www. emfnews. org www. emfnews. org www. emfnews. org Our conclusion: The current U.S. cell phone radiation standards, by the U.S. Federal Communications Commission (FCC) specified and largely based on 1992 mobile phone industry recommendations, are outdated and thus 20 times more radiation to penetrate the head than the rest of the body. EC urges the FCC to adapt their standards to have the latest scientific knowledge and increasing mobile phone use by children. ?The first mobile phones were marketed for adults,? said Naidenko. ?But the kids today are just as likely a cell phone like a video game, baseball or possess a bicycle.? According to the Pew Internet and American Life Project, the cell phone use among U.S. children aged between 12 and 17 years old followed, last year (2008) 71 percent of tweens and teens owned cell phones. More than half use the device daily. EC urges concerned consumers to take action and say the federal government, that mobile phone manufacturers should be required to disclose to any phone, the radiation power on the label. The report also offers safety tips to reduce cell phone radiation. Among them: ? Use headset and the handsfree option, if available. ? more text to talk less. ? Stay off the phone when some bars indicate a weak signal. EEC, the new interactive database on the technical specifications of the phone is currently based on the market and some older models can be searched by model. www. emfnews. org www. emfnews. org www. emfnews. org
Source: http://cellphonesandradiation.com/blog/exposure-to-cell-phone-radiation-part-3/
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