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Workgroup report: base stations and wireless networks-radiofrequency (RF) exposures and health consequences.

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TLDR
Current scientific data are consistent with the conclusion that public exposures to permissible RF levels from mobile telephony and base stations are not likely to adversely affect human health.
Abstract
Radiofrequency (RF) waves have long been used for different types of information exchange via the airwaves—wireless Morse code, radio, television, and wireless telephony (i.e., construction and operation of telephones or telephonic systems). Increasingly larger numbers of people rely on mobile telephone technology, and health concerns about the associated RF exposure have been raised, particularly because the mobile phone handset operates in close proximity to the human body, and also because large numbers of base station antennas are required to provide widespread availability of service to large populations. The World Health Organization convened an expert workshop to discuss the current state of cellular-telephone health issues, and this article brings together several of the key points that were addressed. The possibility of RF health effects has been investigated in epidemiology studies of cellular telephone users and workers in RF occupations, in experiments with animals exposed to cell-phone RF, and via biophysical consideration of cell-phone RF electric-field intensity and the effect of RF modulation schemes. As summarized here, these separate avenues of scientific investigation provide little support for adverse health effects arising from RF exposure at levels below current international standards. Moreover, radio and television broadcast waves have exposed populations to RF for > 50 years with little evidence of deleterious health consequences. Despite unavoidable uncertainty, current scientific data are consistent with the conclusion that public exposures to permissible RF levels from mobile telephony and base stations are not likely to adversely affect human health.

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Citations
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Small-scale energy harvesting through thermoelectric, vibration, and radiofrequency power conversion

TL;DR: A review of three types of energy harvesting with focus on devices at or below the cm3 scale is presented in this paper, where the harvesting technologies discussed are based on the conversion of temperature gradients, mechanical vibrations, and radiofrequency waves.
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Electromagnetic Field Treatment Protects Against and Reverses Cognitive Impairment in Alzheimer's Disease Mice

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Electromagnetic fields and DNA damage.

TL;DR: The comet assay is described and its utility to qualitatively and quantitatively assess DNA damage, studies that have investigated DNA strand breaks and other changes in DNA structure are reviewed, and important lessons learned are discussed.
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Systematic review on the health effects of exposure to radiofrequency electromagnetic fields from mobile phone base stations

TL;DR: There is insufficient data to draw firm conclusions about health effects from long-term low-level exposure typically occurring in the everyday environment, so the evidence for a missing relationship between MPBS exposure up to 10 volts per metre and acute symptom development can be considered strong.
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WHO research agenda for radiofrequency fields.

TL;DR: The World Health Organization (WHO) has recently published a new research agenda for radiofrequency fields, subdivided into epidemiology, human studies, animal studies, cellular studies and mechanisms, and for social science research.
References
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A Ahlbom
- 01 Jan 1998 - 
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TL;DR: This document summarizes current capabilities, research and operational priorities, and plans for further studies that were established at the 2015 USGS workshop on quantitative hazard assessments of earthquake-triggered landsliding and liquefaction in the Czech Republic.
Book

CRC Handbook of Biological Effects of Electromagnetic Fields

Charles Polk
TL;DR: In this paper, the authors present in a concise manner what is actually known at the present time about biological effects of time invariant, low frequency and radio frequency (including microwave) electric and magnetic fields.
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Environmental and chemical carcinogenesis.

TL;DR: This chapter summarizes several aspects of environmental chemical carcinogenesis that have been extensively studied and illustrates the power of mechanistic investigation combined with molecular epidemiologic approaches in establishing causative linkages between environmental exposures and increased cancer risks.
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The precautionary principle - Risk, regulation and politics

TL;DR: The use of the precautionary principle is a regulatory tool that has received much attention among policy makers, industry and academics as discussed by the authors. But its use in terms of trade has been controversial.
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