The chair of a panel looking at Health Canada
The Royal Society of Canada still hasnโt appointed a new chairman of a panel of international scientists reviewing Health Canadaโs wireless radiation standards after the head of the group resigned four weeks ago.
Itโs a sign of how sensitive the panel has become to the decades-old controversy over wireless waves.
But a consumer group which says half of the committee is riddled with members with conflicts of interest favouring the wireless industry not only welcomed the resignation, it wants to start all over.
His group is demanding the code, which sets a guideline on human exposure to electromagnetic energy be changed because it doesnโt take into account the increased use of smart phones and Wi-Fi in homes, schools and businesses today.
Last month, after complaints by C4ST and an article in the Canadian Medical Association Journal, panel chair Daniel Krewski resigned. The Journal said Krewski, a professor in the faculty of medicine at the University of Ottawa, didnโt disclose to the society heโd had a contract in 2008-2009 advising Industry Canada on explaining to the public the risks with cellphone radiation. In an interview with the publication Krewski did say he tell the society he had done consulting for the government.
Meanwhile because there is so much interest in the possible health risks of radiofrequencies, the society had to abandon a scheduled public consultation last month in Ottawa. A new date hasnโt been set yet.
Thereโs been international controversy for years over the possible impact of radiation from wireless sources including cellphones, cellphone towers and Wi-Fi access points. In the face of that, in October, 2011 Health Canada โ which regulates the telecommunications industry, encouraged parents to reduce their childrenโs exposure to cellphones. While a small number of studies have shown brain cancer rates might be elevated in long-term, heavy users of cellphones, the advisory said, other studies havenโt shown a relationship.
It also noted that the International Agency for Research on Cancer classifies radiofrequency (RF) energy as โpossibly carcinogenic to humans.โ
Last year the U.S. Government Accountability Office said the Federal Communications Commission should take another look at its regulations for radiation exposure from cellphones in part because other countries have stiffer rules.
The current version of Safety Code 6 was set in 2009. The limits โhave been established based upon a thorough evaluation of the scientific literature related to the thermal and possible non-thermal effects of RF energy on biological systems,โ the document says in part.
The code covers maximum exposure limits to frequencies between 3 KHz and 300 GHz. It says that at the time of publication โthere is no scientific basis for the premise of chronic and/or cumulative health risks from RF energy at levels below the limits outlined in Safety Code 6.โ Above the limits, the danger is from tissue heating so the code sets out specific absorption rate limits to which a person can be exposed.
However, Clegg says Safety Code 6 is used by the Canadian government to avoid investigating reported health effects of RF exposure.
Clegg and his group have no doubt about the dangers of emissions from cellphones and Wi-Fi. โIโve spent my life in information technology and have seen incredible solutions,โ he said. โIโve also seen some implementations where technology has not done the right thing or been harmful.
โIโve met people who are electro-sensitive and cannot leave their homes, or who had do more from their homes and are in fear of going into a Starbucks or Tim Hortonโs because they feel it.โ
Ever since the panelโs creation C4ST and others have been hammering at its credibility. Clegg said that of the seven remaining members three have conflicts.
โWeโre not saying the panel has to be cookedโ with anti-wireless supporters, he said, but โget representation from some people that acknowledge the harmful effects.โ
Panel members include Dr. Brian Christie, director of the neuroscience program at the University of Victoria; Dr. Richard Findlay, a British physicist who has worked in the field of electromagnetic research; Dr. Kenneth Foster, professor of bioengineering at the University of Pennsylvania;ย Dr. Louise Lemyre, who specializes in risk management in public health; Dr. John Moulder, who has done work on the biological risks of mobile phone use; Dr. Frank Prato of Western University, whose research includes discovering that exposure to extremely low frequency magnetic fields can relieve pain; and Dr. Rianne Stam, a Dutch researcher who works on the possible health risks of electromagnetic fields.
Clegg has written to the society about alleged conflicts of interest. In reply Geoffrey Flynn, chair of the committees that set up the panel, said in a letter the points of view and potential conflicts of interest โare largely known to us.โ He urged Clegg not to pre-judge their findings.
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