Do radio waves from mobile devices cause cancer? A look at the evidence
Current scientific consensus is that there is little to no evidence that radiofrequency causes increased risk of cancer in humans.
Latest in
Current scientific consensus is that there is little to no evidence that radiofrequency causes increased risk of cancer in humans.
The claim that “vaccines cause autism” first received its scientific backing by Andrew Wakefield’s now-retracted study in The Lancet, published…
Another purported cure-all for cancer A claim that the “first complete cure for cancer” had been discovered by an Israeli…
News about health and medicine touch the lives of many people, therefore they often become highly circulated on the Internet.…
“I think that the title overstates the position with the present level of knowledge and is too sensationalist. The ‘ovarian cysts’ stated to typically characterize PCOS are not cysts but follicles and this may be misleading. On the positive side, the quotes from Professor Robert Norman are spot on and accurately quoted (see Annotations below).”