Cell phones and hip bones UPDATE. Consumer Reports offers comfort to cell phone users
Reported in Does Cell-Phone Radiation Cause Cancer? (Consumer Reports, 9/28/2015)
5/26/2019 update, "Dem bones: Toe, foot, ankle, leg, knee, thigh, hip, back, neck, head", starts here.
Do Cell Phones Emit Radiation that is Actually Harmful? (Defender Shield, 5/6/2019)
WE'RE ALL GONNA DIE!!! The degree of exposure depends on several factors, including the type of cell phone being used, how far the user is from the cell phone’s antenna, how much time is spent on the cell phone and how far the user is from cell towers. Because smartphone users are likely to use their smartphones more extensively, and also carry these devices with them at all times, it stands to reason that cell phone radiation may pose potential health issues.
5/21/2019 update, "Cell phones and your butt", starts here.
Cell-phone sciatica is a pain in the buttSitting on your smartphone can do more than just bend the device. (Consumer Reports, 4/14/2015)
Specifically, it can trigger sciatica, or pain that starts in your buttocks and shoots down the leg. I know that because, as a practicing neurologist, I have seen several patients complaining of the problem over the past few years. And I've been able to trace it back to the object tucked into their back pocket.
Original 10/27/2019 post, "Cell phones and hip bones", starts here.
With the operative word being "may".
Link to October 27 textually.org post, "Cell Phone May Reduce Bone Density in Hips".
Link to October 27, 2009, WebMD Health News article, "Cell Phones on Hip May Weaken Bone. Study Suggests Link Between Bone Weakness and Wearing a Cell Phone on the Hip".
Excerpt: Using an X-ray technique used in the diagnosis and monitoring of patients with osteoporosis, researchers from Turkey's Suleyman Demireli University measured pelvic bone density in 150 men who regularly carried their cell phones attached to their belts.
The men carried their phones for an average of 15 hours each day; they had used cell phones for an average of six years.
The researchers found that bone mineral density was slightly less on the side of the pelvis where the mobile phones were carried than on the side that was not in contact with the phones.
The difference was not statistically significant and fell far short of approaching bone density reductions seen in people with osteoporosis.
BONUS ROUND (August 26, 2012)
For those of you for whom the operating word is "meh", these all-leather cell phone pouches from Australia -- have Velcro closures and slip upright on any belt -- are certainly an eye-catching accessory.
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