WIRELESS RADIATION HEALTH RISK! ⚠

Brain Tumors and Wireless Radiation: It’s Time for Real Talk

The studies below don’t mince words: wireless radiation—especially from mobile and cordless phones—has repeatedly been associated with malignant and benign brain tumors. If you’re tired of the corporate-driven narrative that ‘there’s no solid evidence,’ then read on. This is the brutal truth, straight from independent research that regulators keep ignoring.


Simulation of the Incidence of Malignant Brain Tumors in Birth Cohorts That Started Using Mobile Phones in Japan

Reference: Sato, Y., et al. (2019). Bioelectromagnetics 40(3):143-149.

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NTP Technical Report on Cell Phones and Cancer

Reference: National Toxicology Program TR595:1-466. (2018).

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Report of Final Results: Brain and Heart Tumors in Sprague-Dawley Rats from Prenatal Exposure to a 1.8 GHz GSM Base Station

Reference: Falcioni, L., et al. (2018). Environmental Research 165:496-503. Summary: NTP Cell Phone Radiation Studies

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Exposure to Cell Phone Radiofrequency Alters Corticotrophin Hormone Levels and Brain Histology

Reference: Shahabi, S., et al. (2018). Iranian Journal of Basic Medical Sciences 21:1269-1274.

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Brain Tumors: Rise in Glioblastoma Multiforme in England (1995-2015)

Reference: Philips, A., et al. (2018). Journal of Environmental and Public Health 2018(7910754).

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2100 MHz Radiofrequency Radiation of a 3G-Mobile Phone and DNA Oxidative Damage in Brain

Reference: Sahin, D., et al. (2016). Journal of Chemical Neuroanatomy 75(Pt B):94-98.

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Pooled Case-Control Studies in Sweden: Mobile/ Cordless Phone Use and Glioma Risk

Reference: Hardell, L., et al. (2015). PathoPhysiology 22(1):1-13.

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Mobile Phone Radiation Causes Brain Tumors and Should Be Classified as a Probable Human Carcinogen

Reference: Morgan, L., et al. (2015). International Journal of Oncology 46:1865-1871.

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The CERENAT Case-Control Study: Mobile Phone Use and Brain Tumours

Reference: Coureau, G., et al. (2014). Occupational & Environmental Medicine 71(7):514-22.

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Acoustic Neuroma and Phone Use: Another Pooled Analysis

Reference: Hardell, L., et al. (2013). International Journal of Oncology 43(4):1036-1044.

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The Hill Viewpoints (1965) on Brain Tumors, Mobile and Cordless Phones

Reference: Hardell, L., et al. (2013). Reviews on Environmental Health 28(2-3):97-106.

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Use of Mobile/Cordless Phones and Increased Risk for Glioma & Acoustic Neuroma

Reference: Hardell, L., Carlberg, M., et al. (2013). PathoPhysiology 20(2):85-110.

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Mobile Phones & Head Tumours: A Critical Analysis of Case-Control Data

Reference: Levis, A.G., et al. (2012). Open Environmental Sciences 6(1):1-12.

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On the Association Between Glioma, Wireless Phones, Heredity, and Ionising Radiation

Reference: Carlberg, M., et al. (2012). PathoPhysiology 19(4):243-252.

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Discrepancies in Epidemiological Studies: Mobile Phones & Head Tumours

Reference: Levis, A.G., et al. (2011). Environmental Health 10:59.

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Indications of Possible Brain Tumor Risk in Mobile-Phone Studies: Should We Be Concerned?

Reference: Cardis, E., et al. (2011). Occupational & Environmental Medicine 68:169-171.

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Estimating the Risk of Brain Tumors from Cell Phone Use: Published Case-Control Studies

Reference: Morgan, L.L. (2009). Pathophysiology 16(2-3):137-147.

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Cell Phones & Brain Tumors: A Review Including Long-Term Data

Reference: Khurana, V.G., et al. (2009). Surgical Neurology 72(3):205-14.

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Epidemiological Evidence for Association Between Wireless Phones and Tumor Diseases

Reference: Hardell, L., et al. (2009). PathoPhysiology 16(2-3):113-122.

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Mobile Phone/Cordless Phones & Brain Tumor Risk

Reference: Hardell, L., et al. (2009). International Journal of Oncology 35(1):5-17.

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Histopathological Examinations of Rat Brains After Long-Term GSM-900 Exposure

Reference: Grafström, G., et al. (2008). Brain Research Bulletin 77(5):257-63.

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Mobile Phone Use & Risk of Acoustic Neuroma

Reference: Lonn, S., et al. (2004). Epidemiology 15(6):653-659.

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Final Reality Check

Yes, these studies are numerous. Yes, they come from different labs, different countries, different times. Yet they keep drawing the same picture: long-term, heavy phone use correlates with higher brain tumor risk. The scandal is that industry and captured agencies are ignoring it, letting the public keep pressing phones to their temples without even a real warning.

No, this is not hyperbole. It’s not ‘alarmist.’ It’s fact. The data speaks for itself. Use a headset, limit your calls, keep your phone away from your body—or keep living in denial until it hits closer to home.

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