The Wi-Fi and Mobile Phone Cancer Debate Heats Up

Your smartphone, your Wi-Fi, your smart meter, your iPad and much else all use radio-frequency radiation (RFR), but do you know what physical effect this is having on your and your family’s health? Where will you find the truth? Although we only ever hear publicly that RFR “should” be safe, a glimpse behind the scenes reveals a raging battle amongst scientists in an attempt to control the narrative.

This struggle comes at a time when the governments of the world are awaiting the forthcoming WHO Environmental Health Criteria monograph, which will pronounce on the health risks or otherwise of exposure to electromagnetic fields including RFR. Even more critical is the upcoming possible reclassification of RFR as a probable cancer risk by the International Agency for Research on Cancer (IARC). The stakes could not be higher.

At the centre of this battle are Meike Mevissen on one side and Ken Karipidis on the other. They are the lead authors of two of the 12 systematic reviews commissioned by the WHO EMF Project on the health effects of radio-frequency radiation (RFR). Only one of these 12 reviews was considered by experts from the International Commission on the Biological Effects of Electromagnetic Fields (ICBE-EMF) to be well-executed, and this was the one by Mevissen et al., which concluded that there is high certainty evidence that RF-EMF exposure increases the incidence of malignant schwannomas (heart tumours) and gliomas (brain tumours) in rats, with moderate certainty evidence of an increased risk of rare tumours in the adrenal glands and in the liver. This RF-EMF is just the same type of radiation that is emitted by your phone and that you hold to your head and keep in your pocket, and that is constantly by your side.

The lead author of this review, Swiss toxicologist Maeve Mevisson, rather startlingly revealed last month in an interview for Infosperber that her team had had to defend itself from interference from the WHO and that the WHO’s expert responsible for systematic reviews had wanted to select the studies to be included, despite the fact that this expert had no experience with animal studies and that her team included the best experts worldwide. The WHO also wanted the team to, “lump all the selected studies together and then look at the average”. “However,” said Mevisson, “there are different study designs, involving different animal species and sexes — which are known to produce different results. Therefore, a methodology that doesn’t take this into account shouldn’t be used.” 

She is referring here to the abuse of meta-analysis (statistical analysis), which according to the ICBE-EMF, in its critique of the 12 WHO reviews in Environmental Health, should not have been used in any of them, since the studies used did not meet certain strict criteria, there being too few primary studies and too much variability between them.

Her opinion was backed a few days ago by Dr Igor Belyaev, who said:

Biological responses to RF-EMF exposure are not determined solely by power density or carrier frequency, but may also depend on specific patterns of modulation that convey biologically relevant signal characteristics. Under such conditions, averaging across heterogeneous exposure configurations does not approximate an ‘average effect’, but may instead obscure effects that occur only under specific combinations of physical and biological parameters (Vesterinen et al., 2014).

Mevisson went on to say: “I do know one thing about animal studies. … You can design them in such a way that you find nothing, by creating statistical noise that obscures relevant effects,” adding: “If I’m supposed to proceed like that, I wouldn’t even bother starting.”

She also commented: “Research is very political… we are constantly confronted with the attitude that there cannot be any health risks.” She also stated in the German interview with Infosperger that the population has a right to know about the present state of the research but that her government wanted scientists to state that there were no health effects from RFR.

The IARC has said that every known human carcinogen is carcinogenic in experimental animals when adequately tested. Considering Mevisson’s clear findings for cancer in rats, it is strange that another WHO review, the one by Karipidis et al. finds that any link between RFR and cancer in humans is unlikely. However, his review was strongly criticised by ICBE-EMF and by renowned experts Dr Lennart Hardell and Mona Nilsson, who described the omissions, inconsistencies and methodological flaws in detail. Karipidis responded to the ICBE-EMF critique last year and then last month criticised the Mevissen et al. review for not using meta-analysis. Mevissen has already responded to this criticism, defending her review, subsequently being supported by Dr Belyaev (as already mentioned) in further correspondence.

Staying with the Karipidis et al. review, its inclusion of a shockingly poor study, the Danish cohort study, is hard to comprehend. Although the Danish study had been dismissed many years before by the IARC as uninformative regarding cancer risks due to “considerable misclassification in exposure assessment”, it was given a strong weighting by Karipidis and team. The inclusion of the Danish study was extensively discussed by Hardell and Nilsson in an article earlier this year and is also mentioned in the ICBE-EMF critique. The division of exposed and unexposed control groups seems nonsensical. Only private mobile phone subscribers in Denmark between 1982 and 1995 were included in the exposed group, excluding the group most likely to be exposed, which consisted of 200,507 corporate mobile phone users. Users with mobile phone subscriptions after 1995 were treated as unexposed; all users of cordless (DECT) phones were treated as unexposed although they were exposed to a similar level of RFR to that of mobile phone users. In addition, actual exposure data were unknown and no analysis of laterality (the side where the phone was held in relation to the position of the tumour) was performed.

The errors in this study were so serious that others reviewers commented, “After reviewing the four publications on the Danish cohort study, one might rightly wonder whether this cohort was initially set up to show no increased risk.” And Professor Michael Kundi of the Medical University of Vienna described the Danish cohort study as “the most severely biased study among all studies published so far”. Could its partial funding by telecoms be to blame?

Why would a lead author (Karipidis) give such a study a heavy weighting in his final analysis? Hardell and Nilsson are in no doubt. Amongst the authors of the WHO reviews there is a serious problem of conflicts of interest, with some authors known to have received funding from the telecommunications industry and with many authors also being on the board of the International Commission on Non-Ionising Radiation Protection (ICNIRP), the self-selecting group which sets exposure safety guidelines but which refuses to accept that health damage can occur unless body tissue is heated and emphatically denies long-term effects such as cancer. Indeed, the leader of the WHO EMF Project, Emilie van Deventer, is a member of the Institute of Electrical and Electronics Engineers, which has long prioritised international lobbying efforts aimed at the WHO.

A further glimpse behind the scenes, confirming dubious methodology, is provided by Dr Moskowitz in his blog entry for April 24th 2025 (please scroll down), when he describes his extremely frustrating experience of participating as a peer-reviewer in one of these WHO systematic reviews. He said:

By design, this [systematic review] excluded most of the relevant research; hence, its conclusion is very limited in scope. Although the authors complied with some of the reviewers’ suggestions, the authors refused to deviate from several problematic decisions made in their protocol paper which was published several years earlier. After two revisions, the special issue editor allowed a critically flawed SR paper to be published in the journal.

I am now left wondering if the WHO interfered with all the reviews, succeeding where they failed with the Mevissen et al. review. The fact that the other 11 reviews were considered methodologically flawed by the ICBE-EMF supports this viewpoint as does the fact that the other 11 reviews all inappropriately employed meta-analysis, most of them downplaying any health risks. It is remarkable that Mevisson was able to stand her ground against this pressure and produce a narrative, rather than statistical review, thus not skewing the conclusions.

The battlelines on the health effects of RFR have been drawn for some time and recently I attempted to give a brief resumé of the two camps and their stances in an article in the Conservative Woman, while for HART I summarised ICBE-EMF’s main criticisms of the 12 WHO reviews. The issue is not only the long-term risks of cancer, oxidative stress, DNA damage, cardiomyopathy, sperm damage and neurological effects, but also the growing number of people who experience the short-term effect of electromagnetic hypersensitivity (EHS), meaning that they develop symptoms almost immediately after exposure to RFR and are forced to avoid it, something that is almost impossible nowadays.

What irks me is that only one side in this battle seems to succeed in getting publicity in mainstream publications, and that is the side which hopes to convince us that RFR is safe. For example, in the Guardian last year Ken Karipidis was quoted as saying “concerns around links between cancer and mobile phones should be put to rest”.  Where are the articles on the scientific flaws of the WHO reviews or even on the exceptional review by Mevissen et al.? Those who maintain that there is scientific consensus are quite simply wrong. The scientific opposition to the mainstream ‘no harm’ narrative has assembled at the International Commission of the Biological Effects of Electromagnetic Fields (ICBE-EMF) and this multi-disciplinary expert group deserves to be heard.

Because of my personal experience of RFR my concerns will never be put to rest, as Dr Karipidis would like. I recommend to the reader my recent submission to the Department of Health and Social Care facilitated by my MP, describing this experience and what happened to my neighbours.

If, as I and many others believe, RFR harms health, then we, the public, need to start doing something about it now instead of waiting in vain for regulators to resolve this issue in a scientifically plausible way. Those of us who are affected try to practice avoidance, but this needs to be facilitated by society. I heard recently that a group of private schools had begun taking avoidance measures, such as hard-wiring the internet instead of using Wi-Fi. They had been inspired by Dr Erica Mallery-Blythe, a UK expert on the effect of non-ionising radiation on vulnerable groups such as children and those with EHS. I highly recommend her lecture, which summarises the science and talks about practical measures to reduce EMF exposure.

I urge individuals, doctors, politicians, schools and even local planning authorities to inform themselves and to take action now. We cannot, as in the case of asbestos, afford to wait for 100 years after the first warning, before taking steps to prevent damage to an entire generation. Here are a few places to start:

We all need to take responsibility for educating ourselves, since those who control the narrative appear to be unconcerned about potential health risks and seek to obscure any evidence of their existence.

Subscribe
Notify of

To join in with the discussion please make a donation to The Daily Sceptic.

Profanity and abuse will be removed and may lead to a permanent ban.

30 Comments
Oldest
Newest Most Voted
Inline Feedbacks
View all comments
factsnotfiction
2 months ago

Landmark studies in 1950 (Doll & Hill) and 1954 (British Doctors Study) confirmed the link between smoking and lung cancer.

Alarmingly, it took 30 years for a cultural shift, and 40 years for a legal one.

Like in medicine, one only has to follow the money to see the glaring problem.

Jack the dog
Jack the dog
2 months ago

With the difference that nowadays everything including government is obsessed by and geared to wireless Internet access 24hours a day, and you cannot switch your phone off.

I foresee a big market for Faraday bags.

Marcus Aurelius knew
2 months ago
Reply to  Jack the dog

Shortly after Fauci (yes that Fauci) had his way to make HIV-AIDS a “thing”, a family friend of ours went out and spent his life savings on shares of companies making condoms. It didn’t work out too well.

FerdIII
2 months ago

Agreed – Electro-magnetism must affect the human body. Record rates of cancer, alzheimers etc (drugs, poisons, toxins, chemtrails + EMR?). The mobile phone is just one ‘vector’ (oh sciency). It is the dozens/hundreds of other EMR sources that radiates us every day as well. THTP have no interest in even studying the issue. That sounds familiar.

anbak
anbak
2 months ago

Excess deaths increased during 2020-2021 in various countries, arguably due to mismanagement or misdiagnosis of ‘Covid 19’ and an alleged therapy to prevent infection of the alleged novel virus

Do you have any evidence for increased death rates due to RFR, or an increase in other comorbidities?

For a fist full of roubles
Reply to  anbak

Perhaps it is responsible for all the psychological conditions which are afflicting the country.

Arborvitae23
2 months ago

I think it may very well be. But more due to its physical use, constant doom scrolling and access to mind-numbing dross.

Tyrbiter
Tyrbiter
2 months ago

As someone who has spent 40 years in professional Radio Frequency engineering, and longer in amateur radio, I don’t believe one iota of this.

Unless the photon energy is high enough to be ionising, able to break chemical bonds, the only known and proven effect of RF energy is thermal, and the only part of the body affected is the lens in the eye.

In the UK the amateur radio licence maximum power limit was increased to 1kW, a factor of 2.5x, in 2024 provided that the ICNIRP regulatory limits are observed. Hardly the decision of a regulator concerned about the effects of RF energy on humans.

Orlando
Orlando
2 months ago
Reply to  Tyrbiter

This is a case of you don’t know what you don’t know. Ionising damage is a plausible mechanism that we know about, but what if the effects go beyond that sort of damage? The body is so massively complicated and it is arrogant to assume we know it all. What if non ionising levels of RF exposure impact gene expression — or even more plausibly — protein folding, which is fundamental to so many processes.

Tyrbiter
Tyrbiter
2 months ago
Reply to  Orlando

Indeed I don’t know the things I either do not or cannot know, however given the number of people and the number of RF emitters in close proximity to those people it would be expected that evidence of harm would be appearing by now. And that is not happening because if it were we would never hear the last of it.

sskinner
2 months ago
Reply to  Tyrbiter

According to AI there are more mobile phone connections than people on Earth, with estimates placing the number of active mobile subscriptions between 8.74 billion and over 12 billion, far exceeding the global population of roughly 8.1–8.2 billion. This means there are more than 1.5 connections per user in many regions. 
Deaths from mobile phone usage should be showing up by now.
The comparison of risks from non ionising radio waves with smoking or Asbestos is a poor equivalence.
There are approximately 1.1 to 1.3 billion people worldwide use tobacco resulting in over 7 to 8 million deaths annually. That is noticable.
Roughly125 million people are currently estimated to be exposed to asbestos in the workplace annually leading to approximately 255,000 deaths worldwide every year. It is the leading cause of work-related deaths globally. That is noticeable.

factsnotfiction
2 months ago
Reply to  sskinner

What if EMF exposure creates a type of immunodevelopmental issue or suppression?

It’s certainly more plausible than a non-existent pathogenic virus.

Marcus Aurelius knew
2 months ago

What if?

But does it?

FerdIII
2 months ago

Indeed. ‘Spanish flu’ occurred during a massive phase of EMF implementation -just a flucidence? No. EMR is real and it not just a ‘phone’ but all of the ‘waves’ every day which assault us. The phone is a small part of that assault. 5G will have smaller puslating ‘towers’ everywhere. This must affect the human body. Yet when I go to a dentist out comes the 1.5 inch lead shield….

thechap
thechap
2 months ago
Reply to  sskinner

You seem to assume that damage caused by mobile phone usage should result in death, a death that can be directly attributed to usage of the mobile phone. What if mobile phones don’t directly cause death, but encourage diseases which are common? They might not be directly linkable to phone usage, but the radio signal could be the cause.

Dementia has become very prevalent in the western world. Is it so prevalent in world populations who don’t use mobile phones? The same could be asked for sugar consumption and cancer.

I’m not saying phones cause damage, but I am saying that just because deaths aren’t attributed to exposure to radio signals doesn’t mean those radio signals aren’t causing harm.

I wouldn’t be surprised to find that excessive close exposure to mobile signals is harmful. Neither would I be surprised if that discovery was hushed up – there is too much money to be made and population control through mobile phones.

Clactonite
Clactonite
2 months ago
Reply to  Tyrbiter

Agreed. As headlined in The Register some years ago “twenty years of phone use and no single case of brain cancer”. Do many people thinking this is an issue know that all light from the sun is also an electromagnetic frequency? Probably not. As you wrote “the only part of the body affected is the lens in the eye.” Exactly.

Marcus Aurelius knew
2 months ago
Reply to  Clactonite

Yeah but tHE SuN iS NAchuraL so ItS OK

For a fist full of roubles

I would have thought that with the massive increase in wireless technology throughout the world there might be some consistent evidence of sytematic harm.
Furthermore the data should indicate that any incidence of harm would be greater in urban as opposed to rural areas and is likely to afflict office over manual workers.
We have been exposed to this radiation for over 30 years now, with no convincing evidence of harm, which is somewhat different to smoking where it was clearly linked to respiratory problems even if the link with lung cancer as not immediately conclusive.

factsnotfiction
2 months ago

You need to read more. The evidence is there, you just don’t know it exists.

JXB
JXB
2 months ago

Speculation is not evidence.

GroundhogDayAgain
2 months ago
Reply to  JXB

Bill Bailey said this earlier…

Consensus is not proof.
Doubt is not disinformation.
Scepticism is not heresy.

For a fist full of roubles

I have read the articles referenced by Gillian in the past and am totally unconvinced. Most is anecdotal and not the product of grown-up planned research. There is only so much of it that a scientifically trained mind can cope with before tedium sets in.

JXB
JXB
2 months ago

“Your smartphone, your Wi-Fi, your smart meter, your iPad and much else all use radio-frequency radiation (RFR),”

And the “much else” includes the electrical wiring in the walls, ceiling, floor of your house, place of work, supply cables underground and strung from poles, your washing machine, TV, etc… and radio abd TV transmissions… Oh and the constant bombardement of the planet from Space.

Do stop this ignorant nonsense,

Marcus Aurelius knew
2 months ago
Reply to  JXB

I concur. But I am ready to be proved wrong. There are more things in heaven and earth than are dreamt of in our philosophy, JXB 😉

Marcus Aurelius knew
2 months ago

That massive fusion reactor in the sky, you see it, right? You know when you stand outside on a bright summer’s day, with skin showing for more than 30 minutes? You see what it does?

Sorry, I am really not worried about non-ionising radiation several orders of magnitude weaker from man made things which have surrounded me for all of my 44 years. It literally passes straight through me as if I am not there.

Of course, I am ready to learn that I am wrong. But I have not seen the evidence, and it’s not for want of trying. I love to be proved wrong, it makes me wiser.

People being addicted to smartphones and screens and believing everything they read? There IS a problem…

JohnK
2 months ago

And spot the real risks when they walk along gazing at the smartphone, e,g,

Marcus Aurelius knew
2 months ago
Reply to  JohnK

Oo, did that hurt

NeilParkin
2 months ago

The link seems plausible, so long as you have no idea of the mechanisms involved. Perhaps we need to have exhaustive research projects that come to inconclusive results.Then leave in the hands of the young and impressionable to come up with ‘Just Stop WiFi’, or something like that.

JohnK
2 months ago
Reply to  NeilParkin

But how would they publish it? Maybe they would re!invent printing on paper!

For a fist full of roubles

Keep wearing your tinfoil hat then Gillian. You know it makes sense.