Subject:  First World conference on Breast Cancer
Date:     Thu, 17 Jul 1997 105111 -0500 (CDT)
From:     "John D. Evans" <jdevans@sympatico.ca>
To:       Multiple recipients of list <emf-l@mail.llion.org>
--------------------------------------------------

Dear EMF-L Members,

After attending just one day (yesterday) at the ground-breaking World
Conference on Breast Cancer, I have taken a moment to scan the one page
Press Release  mentioned by Cathy Bergman of EMRALL.  Here it is for
everyone on EMF-L.  I will report more later.

**********************PRESS RELEASE***************************

FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE
Dateline: Word Conference on Breast Cancer
Kingston, Ontario, Canada

July 15, 1997

The recent report in the New England Journal of Medicine by Linet and
colleagues has been widely reported as showing no link between exposure to
electromagnetic fields (EMF) and one type of leukemia in children. On the
basis of this new study, some scientists and some news media organizations,
including the major networks, have repeated the questionable claim that the
link between EMF exposure and cancer risk is no longer an issue, and
further research is unnecessary.

Such statements, based on a single study, are troubling. More disturbing
still, is the fact that the data presented in the Linet study do not
support the assertion that no link exists. Even a cursory review of the
main data set shows a 53% increase in leukemia incidence at magnetic field
exposure levels above 2 mG; a 72% increase (which is statistically
significant) above 3 mG, and a more than 600% increase at exposures of
between 4 and 5 mG. Above 5 mG, no link is shown, but there are too few
cases in this range to yield any significant result.

Dr. Bary Wilson, who has co-authored a recent book on EMF and breast
cancer, and several other speakers at the World Conference on Breast
Cancer, including Dr. Kjell Hansson Mild of National Institute of Working
Life in Sweden, have stated that a study which is apparently positive and
limited only to leukemia should not be used to discount a possible link
between EMF and cancer in its entirety.

Any statement claiming the demise of the EMF and cancer issue should be
based on an analysis of all the available data and not one study,
particularly one in which the reported data are apparently not reflected in
the conclusions. In fact available data on the subject, provided by many
scientists over more than a decade, do not support the hypothesis that
there is no link between EMF exposure and increased risk for several types
of cancer.

Cindy Sage of Sage Associates and Chair of the EMF program at the conference
points out that, "even a small increased risk of breast cancer due to EMF
exposure has enormous public health implications given the high incidence
of this disease in developed countries."

Based on the Linet, et al. study, it is clearly not justified to call for
the end of research into the possible !ink between EMF and cancer. Given
the growing body of evidence for a possible link between EMF and breast
cancer, in particular, cessation of research funding at this time would be
reckless and scientifically indefensible.

Kjell Hansson Mild, Ph.D.
Natl lnst for Working Life, Sweden

Cindy Sage
Sage Associates, USA

Bary W. Wilson, Ph.D.
Pacific Northwest National Laboratory
USA

****************END OF PRESS RELEASE*******************

It was a good day yesterday, but hard work walking around Queen's
University campus during the heat.  Guess I'm not as young or spry as I
used to be ! ! ! .

Cheers,

John
***********************************************************
*                              John D. Evans

*                e-mail: jdevans@sympatico.ca
*      8 Monroe Court, Wellington, ON   K0K 3L0
*                                CANADA
*                       phone: 613-399-5089
***********************************************************


Archive provided courtesy of WaveGuide, http://www.wave-guide.org
Reprinted with permission of Roy Beavers, http://www.feb.se/EMF-L/EMF-L.html