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Old Feb8-10, 11:26 AM                  #1
Hymne

Hymne is Offline:
Posts: 25
Sleeping habits and the risk of cancer

Hi!
I am going to do a critical analysis of the paper http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/19647986 (only 3 pages).
This is a project that will run for some weeks and I thought that a good start would be if I could get someone with more knowledge in physics to just read the paper and maybe make a comment on the things that seems a little suspicious at first sight.

I would really appreciate some help!
// Hymne
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Old Feb8-10, 03:29 PM       Last edited by Doug Huffman; Feb8-10 at 03:42 PM..            #2
Doug Huffman

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Posts: 73
Re: Sleeping habits and the risk of cancer

The 'physics' are of TV/FM RF transmitters' biological effects.
Increasing rates of skin melanoma have been associated with immune-disruptive radiation from FM/TV transmitters [O. Hallberg, A theory and model to explain the skin melanoma epidemic, Melanoma Res. 16 (2006) 115-118; O. Hallberg, A reduced repair efficiency can explain increasing melanoma rates, Eur. J. Cancer Prev. 17 (2008) 147-152; O. Hallberg, O. Johansson, Melanoma incidence and frequency modulation (FM) broadcasting, Arch. Environ. Health 57 (2002) 32-40; O. Hallberg, O. Johansson, FM broadcasting exposure time and malignant melanoma incidence, Electromagn. Biol. Med. 24 (2005) 1-8; O. Hallberg, Radio TV towers linked to increased risk of melanoma, Report, available at: http://foodconsumer.org/7777/8888/C_...melanoma.shtml, 2007 (accessed 2007)]. Geographical areas covered by several transmitters show higher incidences of melanoma than areas covered by one transmitter. Here we show that a high prevalence of breast cancer and melanoma on the left side of the body may be a logical consequence of sleeping in beds having mattresses containing wave-reflecting metal springs. We found that people tend to sleep for longer periods on their right side, apparently to avoid disturbance by the heartbeat. This puts the left side farther away from the field-attenuating influence of the metal springs in the mattress; thus the left side will spend, on average, more time exposed to stronger combined fields from incident and reflected waves. This hypothesis may also explain why body parts farthest away from the mattress (trunk and upper arms for men; lower limbs and hips for women) have higher melanoma rates than the sun-exposed face area. The implications of this study should promote a critical consideration of population exposure to electromagnetic fields, especially during the night.
"field-attenuating influence of the metal springs in the mattress" would seem as effective as a tin-foil beanie and much more restful! This is a question that will be researched until the answer desired by the funding grant is provided.

My guy on the subject is Dr. John Moulder of Medical College of Wisconsin. Unfortunately he is retired and his oeuvre is being disappeared. Try the RADSAFE radiation health physics listserv.
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