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VOLUME 1,
1989-90
No 1, Nov/December (£0.75p; photocopy)
Chinese find low-level microwaves affect immune system in students
and military personnel;
Royal interest in environmental medicine - Duchess of York visits
Surrey University;
Powerline concern launches POWERWATCH; Irish SPARKS protest group;
British Columbia Hydro buys up homes; Congress report concludes
that EMFs may 'pose hazard';
NRPB EMF guidance to be revised in 1990; Fetal loss linked to raised
EMF exposure;
Depression-magnetic field level again linked in UK study; Leukemia
higher near electrical supply;
HSE dismisses VDU radiation despite US study findings;High stress
in VDU operators study;
Gas-permeable lens growth linked to VDU radiation in study by Anne
Silk;
Many symptoms in electrical hypersensitive workers in Swedish study;
American National Standards Institution revision of RF/MW guidelines
hits controversy;
Microwave oven survey shows leakage in a quarter;
Ministry of Defence endorses guidelines based on thermal model;
Concern grows over deaths at defence posts; Booklet on Electromagnetic
Pulse;
Roger Coghill reports on US Bioelectromagnetics conference;
Breakspear Hospital (Abbots Langley) conference on Biological Effects
of Electromagnetism;
Selected research papers; BENER Digest to cease.
No 2, January/April
1990 (£0.75p; photocopy)
New Electricity Bill may provide loophole to avoid public enquiries;
US study shows living cells can respond to very weak electric fields;
National Grid outlines research programme on 50Hz field effects;
Journal and media coverage of powerline hazards; Halifax protest
group promised public enquiry; International Radiation Protection
Association publishes interim 50/60Hz EMF limits;
Massive US radar base plans for Wales raise health fears;
Strong opposition to MoD Welsh radar plans;
New Zealand proposes RF/MW standard; EC Directive on EM compatibility;
European Bioelectromagnetics Association founded; Coghill Research
Lab opens;
Fuel cell potential pioneered by British scientist Francis Bacon
studied by DoE;
Report on UK seminar on therapeutic uses of EMFs;
Prof del Guidice describes 'two-fluid' model of water; Selected
recent research papers; New books.
No 3, May/June
(£0.50p)
US Environmental Protection Agency categorises ELF EMFs 'probable
human carcinogens';
EC Council adopts new Directive on VDU safety and use; Apple shares
slide on VDU tests; Prenatal electric blanket use linked to childhood
cancer;
Council rejects powerline on health grounds to set UK precedent;
Leukemia mapped in UK;
Report on first UK 'Electro-Medicine' conference;
Welsh radar plans: House of Commons holds debate, Green Party speaks
out;
RF/MW stimulates and suppresses brain tumour cells; RAF says new
Fylingdale's radar is safe; Electromagnetic Man by Dr Cyril
Smith and Simon Best wins Book of the Year award.
No 4, July/August
(£0.50p)
Male breast cancer again linked to occupational EMF exposure;
Revised Environmental Protection Agency report due shortly;
National Grid announces funding of six research projects;
New support for link between neuroblastoma and paternal occupation;
Swedes recommend powerlines avoid school areas; Electronic anaesthesia
for dentistry;
Group opposes proposed ICI Wilton power station and associated EMFs;
Report on seminar on implications of new EC Directive on VDU use;
UK VDU study authors dismiss pregnancy links despite findings;
New Zealand group wins RF transmission reduction; Irish Radio Tara
mast denied permission; Report on US Bioelectromagnetics conference
and UK environmental radiation conference;
6th annual low-level radiation conference;
Review: Extremely Low Frequency Electromagnetic Fields: The Question
of Cancer;
Obituary: PA Czerski; Selected research papers.
No 5 September/October
(£0.50p)
Welsh radar hits problems of US Congressional cut and Environmental
Impact study delay; $500,000 paid by Boeing to settle EM Pulse-leukemia
claim by Robert Strom;
Overhead Lines (Exemption) Regulations 1990 become law;
Charles Brooker's work on geomagnetic field bequeathed to Coghill;
IBM pays for undergrounding Colorado powerline; Finnish workers
show increased leukemia risk; Raised cancer deaths in Swiss railway
engineers;
J Royal Society Medicine EMF editorial challenged by Prof Martin
(Canada) and Roger Coghill;
Report on 23rd General Assembly of the International Union of Radio
Science by Dr Cyril Smith;
NRPB ex-Assistant Director accepts EMF risk from certain occupational
exposure;
Apple Computer sponsors research on VDU EMFs; Concern over Irish
microwave TV system;
No raised leukemia risk in US Navy EMF study; Review of Electropollution
by Roger Coghill.
No 6, November/December
(£0.50p)
Strong criticism of negative UK childhood leukemia study;
White House delays EPA draft release with new EMF review;
NRPB appoints group to respond to EPA report;
Dr Sutherland's research on cancer clusters bequeathed to Anne Silk;
Swedish board proposes limits for VDU ELF emissions; How a VDU works;
MacWorld continues campaign for VDU research funds in US;
Survey indicates most cancers continue to increase worldwide; Is
there an EM/ME connection?;
Electronic torture chamber for Dubai's Special Branch; US rejects
use of EM Pulse in Gulf War;
US study shows microwaves affect uptake across blood-brain barrier
in rats;
Use of electro-stimulation to treat heroin addiction; 27MHz benefits
menorrhagia.
VOLUME 2,
1991
No 1, January/February (£0.50p)
Excess breast cancer in EMF workers found in third study;
Benveniste produces new evidence for water 'memory';
Water quality may be key to clusters; UK researcher starts STREET-WATCH;
US NIOSH study finds no VDU miscarriage risks; US NAS plan to assess
VDU EMF effects; Special glass protects VDUs from eavesdropping;
PARC victory over MoD Welsh radar as Prime Minister steps in; Brecon
Beacons transmission masts alarm Welsh; Scots' concern over planned
ELF/submarine transmitter;
A voyager of discoveries: tribute to Professor Herbert Frohlich
by Dr Cyril Smith.
Nos 2-3,
March/June (£0.75p)
Natgrid requested to remove London borough powerline;
Third US study to find raised childhood leukemia risk; US author
Paul Brodeur to talk in London; US BENER digest reappears; New US
magazine on bioelectromagnetics;
J Radiological Protection issue devoted to EMF health effects;
'Epidemiological studies of exposures to electromagnetic fields:
1. General health and birth outcomes': a reply by Roger Coghill;
First US VDU emission standards; Radon/screens link;
RF/MW systems proliferate: report by IT consultant Bob Connell;
Symposium focuses on EMF health effects: a report by Dr Cyril Smith
on the 9th Annual International Symposium on Man and his Environment,
in Dallas, Texas.
Nos 4/5,
July/October (£0.75p)
Public enquiry to be held into proposed Teesside pylon lines;
Adult leukemia - slight raised risk with powerline distance;
Nobel prize for cell electrical current research; Dr Cyril Smith
addresses IEE on EMF sensitivity; Health fears over EMFs 'greatly
exaggerated' according to IEE report;
European Year for Safety and Health; NRPB publishes NIR guide; EMC
92 Conference;
Complying
with EMC Directive on EM compatibility; Directive's implementation
may be delayed;
EIZO seminar on VDU screen radiation health questions; HSE launch
Consultative Document on VDU Directive; London conference assesses
EMF health effects;
EM control of environmental damage - a report on a Finnish conference
by Dr Cyril Smith;
No change likely in EMF exposure advice short-term: a reply to Roger
Coghill by Dr John Dennis.
No 6, November/December
(£0.50p)
NRPB endorses thermal model for RF/MW risks;
New MM-wave antenna test range opens; Letters to the editor;
German workshop supports 'firm evidence' for EMF non-thermal effects
on living cells;
Peters' childhood leukemia/EMF study published;
Revised ANSI guidelines on RF/MW exposure limits agreed; Work starts
on ANSI ELF standard;
BT ordered to compensate for RSI; Journalists threaten strike over
compulsory RSI retirements;
Second seminar on working with VDU equipment;
EC group proposes EMR occupational guidelines; US BEMS conference
report by Roger Coghill.
VOLUME 3,
1992
No 1, January/February (£0.50p)
Health & Safety Commission launches Consultative Document on VDU
Directive;
First Congress of European Bioelectromagnetics Association;
A 'radical' explanation of how EMFs cause health hazards by Oxford
chemist;
Efficacy of electromagnetic therapies dismissed by Sheffield's Dr
Anthony Barker;
Microwave transmitters on schools, etc, rejected by Solihull Council
on health fears;
US police union surveys members over cancer/radar link;
Telecoms companies prepare to exploit mobile phone technology;
Environmental aspects of aging and EMF effects on the endocrine
system: report on 10th Man
and his Environment International Symposium in Dallas by Dr Cyril
Smith.
No 2, March/April
(£0.50p)
£5m study of childhood cancer by UK's Coordinating Committee to
include EMFs;
NRPB Advisory Group minimises hazard from NIR;
Evidence for electric field influence on calcium influx via effect
on lymphocytes;
Evaluating electromagnetic field sensitivity by Dr Bill Rea in Dallas;
US research finds human sensitive to weak magnetic fields show EEG
changes;
US computer giants form VDT Health Research Foundation;
Review: VDU Terminal Sickness: Computer health risks and how
to protect yourself;
Finnish study links VDU ELF magnetic field to miscarriage;
Claims of 'hummers' win £20,000 UK official inquiry;
Letters: 'Cancer cluster near Sutton Coldfield transmitter';
'Are electric or magnetic fields the active parameter?';
EM pulse linked to leukemia in US workers in test program.
No 3-4, May-August
(£0.75p)
Yorkshire Enquiry into Natgrid proposals hears many objections;
Government backs £500,000 study of mobile phone emissions;
'A David amongst the Goliaths': First of Roger Coghill's 3-part
series on his experiences appearing as an expert witness at the
Yorkshire Enquiry;
Powerline magnetic field health effects: isolating factors and clarifying
issues - Alasdair Philips explores the debate with some of his own
data;
Brain haemorrhage deaths in N Ireland blamed on army surveillance
system.
No 5-6, September/December
(£0.75p)
Sweden officially recognises EMF-cancer link based on new studies;
Sweden recognises brain tumour as work-related injury;
'The Yorkshire Enquiry, Dr Ray Cartwright and the saga so far' -
Roger Coghill continues with his second report on the hearing;
Free radicals provide a mechanism for EMFs to promote cancer - Prof
Gerald Scott of Aston University presents a plausible theory;
First World Congress for Electricity and Magnetism in Biology and
Medicine - Roger Coghill reports on a record attendance in Florida;
Report on Swiss international seminar on electromedical treatment
of addiction;
Negative conclusions despite flaws in British VDU study.
VOLUME 4,
1993
No 1, January/March (£0.50p)
NRPB launches revised guidance on EMFs that conflicts with draft
EC Directive;
EC's Physical Agents Directive proposal includes four action levels
for NIR;
The Yorkshire Powerline Enquiry: Part 3, the Substation - Roger
Coghill's third report;
Finnish VDU study of magnetic field emission/miscarriage link published;
Cellular studies must take account of oxidative stress - Prof Gerald
Scott reviews NRPB's Electromagnetic Fields and Cancer: A review
of relevant cellular studies;
US Congress hears latest cellular research - Roger Coghill follows
up his previous report from the First World Congress for Electricity
and Magnetism in Biology and Medicine;
Sutton Coldfield TV transmitter/cancer cluster study funded by British
Government.
No 2, April/June
(£0.50p)
Lawsuit forces US mobile phone industry to do research;
International Non-Ionising Radiation Committee's position paper
on mobile phone radiation to include low-power units;
Yorkshire Powerline Enquiry: the Lackenby substation final hearings
- by Roger Coghill;
Powerline cancers may be due to focussing of solar radiation by
line fields in 11-year cycle: research by geophysicist Anthony Hopwood;
US EMF-child cancer case loses.
Nos 3-4,
July/December (£0.75p)
First UK child cancer case against local power company by Studholme
family;
US study finds breast cancer risk in female electrical workers;
German research supports EMF-breast cancer-melatonin link; Energis
lands BBC contract;
BMJ publishes (positive) Danish and (negative) Finnish childhood
cancer studies;
Alasdair Philips criticises Danish/Finnish studies;
NRPB's new guidance rejects non-thermal effects for limits;
Pooled data in Lancet analysis support powerline magnetic
field/childhood leukemia link;
Roger Coghill assesses the WHO's Electromagnetic Fields (300Hz
to 300GHz); Advice to environmental health officers;
Anne Silk reviews VDU Work and the Hazards to Health by London
Hazards Centre;
Swedish group for electrically/VDU injured tops 1,600;
Coherence in condensed and living matter by Professor Emelio del
Giudice, University of Milan;
ME victims sought to test British brain wave boosting device;
Dr L Vershaeve reports on a Brussels symposium on NIR health effects.
VOLUME 5,
1994
Nos 1-2, January/June (£1.50p)
EC Parliament calls for limits against NIR exposure from powerlines
and appliances;
Canadian study supports occupational EMF-leukemia link;
Secretary of Health rejects prudent avoidance approach to electromagnetic
fields;
NRBP supplementary report still basically sceptical;
North London children sue Trade and Industry Secretary Michael Heseltine
over residential line; Gwent tumour victims sue local utility; North
Yorkshire line given provisional go-ahead;
BMJ publishes Philips' critique of Danish/Finnish studies;
Panorama TV EMF hazards programme; Floderus study published
linking workers' EMF exposure to leukemia risk;
Ross Adey and Sir Richard Doll head speakers at London conferences
on EMF health hazards;
Japanese magnetotherapy firm launches in UK; Recent useful EMF guides;
Health risks: the utilities' view - a review of Electricity Association
literature by Roger Coghill; Transfer of biological activity by
electromagnetic fields - Prof Jacques Benveniste discusses his controversial
results;
NRPB review of VDU hazards incomplete, assesses Anne Silk.
Nos 3-4,
July/December (£1.50p)
Swedes reinforce adult leukemia link and plan breast cancer study;
Public Inquiry favours utility's proposal for Suffolk substation
despite alternatives;
UK Childhood Cancer Study must measure electric fields - Alasdair
Philips critically reviews its research Protocol;
North London families lose cables case but launch appeal; Appeal
over legal aid withdrawal; Geomagnetic storms linked to male manic-depression;
Sunspots linked to schizophrenia;
Prof Mike O'Carroll reports on two conferences: 'Electromagnetic
Transmissions' hosted by Professor Doll, and 'Electricity in Public
Health' conference organised by Powerwatch;
Upcoming London conference: 2nd 'Electromagnetic Transmissions',
chaired by Prof Doll;
Institution of Electrical Engineers finds slender evidence of ELF
effects: Roger Coghill assesses their recent literature review;
More VDU effects reported: Anne Silk describes the major research
on VDU effects at the BEMS meeting in Copenhagen;
Ultra High Dilutions: Physiology and Physics, reviewed by
Dutch editor Arjo Bol;
Cold fusion: life after death. Eugene Mallove, Director of the Cold
Fusion Technology Publishing and Research Organisation, New Haven,
Conn, USA, describes story behind the misinformation.
VOLUME 6,
1995
Nos 1-2 (£1.50p)
Dramatic cuts in EMF exposure demanded by US draft report;
Biggest EMF lawsuit against powerline launched by top US attorney
- then dropped!;
Breast cancer-EMF link strengthened by German study and US pineal
research;
Are bras a risk due to re-radiation from under-wiring? asks Anne
Silk;
Incubators emit significant EMFs report both US and Swedish researchers;
BEMS conference report by Roger Coghill; Studholme legal aid appeal;
Low-level microwaves break rat brain DNA reported by Drs Lai and
Singh in the US;
EC report calls for more research on mobile phone safety; Mobile
phone companies fund EMC research centre; Motorola funds mobile
phone studies;
Dr Jean Monro wins court apology from World in Action...and
expands in Germany where GPs are taught about electromagnetic sensitivity;
EM Hypersensitivity conference proceedings and support groups; New,
low-cost EMR screening material;
Skin biopsies differ for sensitive VDU operators;
Unlocking the therapeutic secrets of magnetism - Roger Coghill presents
new findings;
Magnetotherapy conference in May, 1996; Spanish Euro EMF Centre
proposal;
A quantum approach to biology and medicine - Roger Taylor reports
on a Surrey University seminar covering work by Fritz Popp, Cyril
Smith and Mae-Wan Ho;
Harvard Center to review cellular phone and EMF studies.
Nos 3-4 (£1.50p)
NRPB Head chairs EC mobile phone expert group amid growing concerns;
HAARP launched by US military on ionosphere against charges of global
vandalism;
UK domestic
magnetic fields show diurnal variation by up to 3-fold;
50Hz electric fields linked to increased radon uptake by Prof Henshaw
at Bristol University; Sweden becomes first country to endorse 'prudent
avoidance'; Studholme's win back legal aid; Prof Adey lectures at
Royal Society of Medicine; Mobile phone research groups overseas;
The Water of Life: Sally Ingram reports on the Scientific and Medical
Network conference; Porphyrins: the link between EM sensitivity,
multiply chemical sensitivity, amalgam, and VDUs? - Australian Diane
Crumpler explores the possible connections;
Dr Cyril Smith reviews Michel Schiff's The Memory of Water,
about Prof Jacques Benveniste's research and battle;
EC Directive on EM Compatibility comes into full effect.
VOLUME 7,
1996
No 1 (£1.00p)
US and Australian research endorses cellular phone emissions hazard;
High electric fields linked to increased childhood leukemia in first
UK study;
Microshield launches mobile phone protective shield; 400kV Amersham
line Hearing;
UK reaction to new research on mobile phone radiation:
Dr Camilia Gabriel's work develping a phantom head, the NRPB and
the ICNIRP conclusions; Electric fields and radon uptake: NRPB questions
Prof Henshaw's conclusions;
VDU update in need of revision: Alasdair Philips reviews the updated
version of VDU Terminal Sickness by Peggy Bentham;
Roger Coghill reports on the 3rd International Congress of the European
Bioelectromagnetics Association and COST 244 meeting in Nancy, France.
No 2 (£1.00p)
Australian Govt provides $4.5m to study mobile phone radiation;
11-fold increased leukemia risk in electricity workers only when
electric fields included;
Prof Adey reports non-thermal 836 MHz results at BEMS conference;
London mobile phone health hazards conference; WaveGard mobile phone
guard launched;
UK power groups' fund to fight lawsuits; Electricity, powerlines
and public health conference;
US NRA-NSA EMF/cancer link review finds 'reliable link';
Former NRPB Assistant Director Dr John Dennis gives an overview
of current international guidance which accepts only thermal hazard;
Roger Coghill reviews Safe as Houses? Ill health and electrostress
in the home;
Finnish study on EMFs and cancer 'flawed'; First non-thermal guidelines
proposed in Sydney;
Dr Peter French's new Australian research on possible mobile phone
hazards.
Nos 3-4 (£2.00p)
Headaches in mobile phone users the focus of international studies;
Repacholi study reports doubling of tumours in mice exposed to digital
phone radiation;
UK and Australian research shows TV and radio mast hazard requires
study;
Professor Henshaw provokes reaction at Association of District Councils'
conference;
'Prudent avoidance' endorsed by Bristol University's Peter Grainger's
report defies NRPB's view; Bristol research centre to study EMFs
and other factors in childhood cancer;
Domestic appliances' magnetic field measured by Bristol University's
Preece and Grainger;
EC proposes £20m research program on mobile phones;
US conference on cellular phone safety and research features Camelia
Gabriel and Om Gandhi; London conference reflects industry view
on mobile phone safety;
Swedish research finds VDU exposure reduces daytime melatonin levels;
Third female breast cancer study finds EMF link;
New book: The Melatonin Hypothesis: Breast Cancer and the Use
of Electric Power;
Roger Coghill reviews Mobile Communications Safety, edited
by N Kuster, Q Balzano, J Lin; RF/MW studies show significant effects
from Latvian radar;
Comprehensive RF/MW studies review by New Zealand's Dr Neil Cherry;
UK pain scientist joins EM therapy firm Medicur.
VOLUME 8,
1997
No 1 (£2.00p; photocopy)
Mobile phone radiation mice tumour link much stronger than admitted
- Repacholi's Australian findings re-analysis reveals 30-fold increased
effect;
Linet/NCI study shows magnetic field link to childhood leukemia
despite official denials;
Cell-phone base station signals; Will MW emitters face full compensation
liability?;
Lawsuit against Motorola given go-ahead; Hagenuk launch first low
radiation mobile phone;
Taiwan study links powerline EMFs to childhood leukemia;
High adult leukemia risk from domestic/work EMFs; 'VDUs lower melatonin'
study reference; Roger Coghill reports on the Second World Congress
for Electricity and Magnetism in Biology and Medicine in Bologna;
Dr Hulda Clark's The Cure for All Diseases reviewed by Cyril
Smith;
MS patients benefit from British pulsed magnetic field device.
No 2 (£2.00p)
Coghill sues mobile phone distributor on health issue;
Study
reveals 5-fold variation in radiation from 16 mobile phones;
NRPB permits 'unlimited' use of mobile phones;
Al Fayed granted Judicial Review over proposed mast; BT's position
on radiation and in-car use; Cellular industry paper focusses on
health issue; Anti-RAD 75 launched;
Studholme case dropped amid Linet study negative 'spin'; Lloyds
of London focuses on EMF risk; Australian Local Govn limits mobile
phone mast sites and emissions; Aussie research council reneges
on committee make-up;
Canadian TV reveals scandal of misused funds involving US Wireless
Technology Research;
Fluorescent tube radiation highlighted in workplace survey;
Swiss-Re/Reinsurance assess EMFs' risk; Victory for pylon protestors;
Higher leukemia in Taiwanese adults living near powerlines; Meta-analysis
links adult and childhood leukemia with domestic EMFs; Magnetic
fields, leukemia and CNS tumours in adults; Companies takes positive
action on magnetic fields in buildings; Surveyors warned to take
account of powerlines; Nurses informed about EMFs;
Prof Mike O'Carroll discusses two planning inquiry reports that
raise the issue of the precautionary principle;
GSM - just a Great Sad Mistake? Alasdair Philips argues that the
GSM system will turn out to be a disaster; Iridium mobile system
irradiates with 46 satellites;
VDU radiation harms chick embryos in French study;
Bioresonance offers effective therapy for a variety of ailments;
Conference: Mobile Phones: Is there a health risk?; Your land phone
- the ideal bug!?;
Media blamed for public's risk perception - Dr Leslie Hawkins reports
on an international conference on risk perception and communication
concerning EMF exposure;
It's a phaser gun, Jim, but not as we know it!
Nos 3-4 (£3.00p)
Largest mobile phone study finds serious health problems in users;
'Conclusive evidence' from US and Japanese studies that EMFs can
affect cellular cancer pathways; Australian brain cancer rise reflects
mobile phone use;
Swedish study shows domestic/work EMFs raise leukemia and CNS tumours;
Cellular radiation study on memory and cognition by Preece at Bristol;
Headaches from mobile phones 'likely to be real' says Dr Alan Frey;
Coghill case to proceed;
IEE seminar report: 'EMFs - is the force with you?'; WHO EMF research
plan; Pontypool Project's international support;
Dublin meeting to debate health concerns over new masts;
Nocturnal
EMFs reduce melatonin in women, linking breast cancer; Breast cancer
in Australia; Underwired bras and breast lumps; An OFFER Philips
couldn't refuse;
NRPB version of Studholme case withdrawal economical with the truth;
Pager opens doors;
The next generation of mobile phones: CDMA or GSM asks Alasdair
Philips?
Dr Neil Cherry's RF/MW report available in UK; US advice on vehicle-mounted
antenna;
Establishment meeting pushs same old line on NIR hazard;
Landowner to contest Nat Grid £3,500 compensation for 400kV line
on 13 acres; Powerwatch helps move powerline;
Meta-analysis of dose-response relationships for work magnetic fields
with brain cancer and leukemia;
Skandia takes enlightened policy on electrical sensitivity; Protest
at dismissive view of ES/EMF link in European report;
VDU stress reduced by Tecno magnetic oscillator; EMFs' effects on
eye function suggests need to study mobile phone users - first of
two-part report by Anne Silk;
First World Congress on Effects of Electricity and Magnetism in
the Natural World, organised by Coghill Laboratories: call for papers.
VOLUME 9,
1998
Nos 1-2 (£3.50p)
Dr Mild's study of 11,000 Swedish and Norwegian mobile phone users
reveals significant effects; Magistrate issues summons against mobile
phone supplier in Coghill case;
First British mobile phone/brain tumour case launched; Mobile phone
seller's health 'factsheet';
New NCI report finds strong childhood leukemia link to electric
home appliances;
Two EMF conferences announced: at Bristol and Madeira;
When microwaves are... not microwaves!; Beware rotating car tyres!;
Orange masts re-sited or rejected after health protests by residents;
BT tests Microshield case; Tecno AO research presented at BEMS;
CW Union advises low use of mobile phones;
Childhood leukemia shows two- to five-fold jump in radiation workers'
offspring;
Judicial Review to oppose National Grid pylons supported by William
Hague;
Lloyds underwriters assess EMF threat; Ban on 'glowing' pigeon pie;
American Ad Hoc Association appeal challenges FCC RF radiation rules;
Dr John Goldsmith's (Israel) paper on epidemiologic evidence relevant
to radar (MW) effects;
Dr Peter French (Sydney): 835 MHz radiation affects morphology and
growth of mast cells;
EMF research on eye function reveals effects from VDUs and on contact
lenses - final part of Anne Silk's report;
New ICNIRP international EMF guidance further isolates NRPB;
Dr Cyril Smith assesses the involvement of electromagnetic fields
in specific complementary therapies in the first part of a series.
No 3
(£2.00p)
Coghill's case rejected as Richard Branson warns staff on mobile
phone dangers;
US scientists vote 50/60Hz electromagnetic fields as 'possible human
carcinogen';
National RF occupational exposure study by NRPB; Mobile phone radiation
raises blood pressure; Blindness blamed on mobile phone use; Ex-BT
engineer's widow sues Motorola;
Bristol University hosts international ELF conference; IEE issues
paper on LF EMFs;
Europe tackles electromagnetic radiation with new, inclusive proposals;
NRPB/WHO 'chums only' epidemiology meeting; Brief book review: Electric
UFOs by A Budden;
DNA changes in cells at athermal MW level; Worldwide rise in childhood
cancer;
MPs table Early Day Motion on siting of cellular masts;
Low level 50Hz magnetic fields affect human cognition in Preece
study;
Milford Haven Orange mast protest;
Alasdair Philips presents some of his arguments as an expert witness
on behalf of Roger Coghill; Dr Cyril Smith continues to assess the
involvement of electromagnetic fields in complementary therapies;
Letters: 'MS and the electrical environment'; 'Lymphoma and mobile
phone use';
The Times apologises to Dr Jacques Benveniste over slur;
Dr Gerald Hyland at Warwick University discusses possible uses of
body's EM emissions.
No 4 (£2.00p)
Draft DETR document on land use planning involving EMFs invites
comments;
Low-level RF effects 'established' at Vienna conference;
Irish High Court to hear Judicial Review on mobile phone masts;
Coghill court case did not judge on the need for warning labels;
World's first mobile phone company, in S Africa, to give staff shields;
South African sues local phone companies for brain tumour as they
fund research;
British brain tumour sufferer to sue mobile manufacturer;
German mobile phone study finds brain electrical effects;
US NIEHS's new report exhibits U-turn and short-term memory loss!
REVOLT opposes new Natgrid line proposal;
Swedish union reports doubling of ES problems; VDU/Tecno results
encouraging;
'Some British nuclear sites could explode', says report;
Optician Anne Silk exhorts NRPB to include all-important environmental
sources of RF exposure in their ongoing occupational study;
Roger Coghill surveys some recent magnetotherapy publications.
VOLUME 10,
1999
Nos 1-2 (£5.00p)
Select Committee advises cutting mobile phone radiation guidance;
Members of Expert Group on mobile phones headed by Sir William Stewart;
Preece's results on mobile phone radiation produce more questions
than answers;
House of Commons meeting debates mobile phones/masts;
Dept of Health funds research at Chemical and Biological Defence
Porton Down;
Glasgow health authorities disagree on advice to ban masts; Scottish
Parliament to hold inquiry into mast safety; NIFATT win case to
remove Orange mast in County Down, Northern Ireland; Industry-funded
conference stifles criticism, misleads and produces little;
Sir Richard Doll accepts low Odds Ratios in EMF data;
Firms cash in with remote earpieces at inflated prices; Corney mobile
phone/tumour case dropped by solicitors due to insufficient evidence;
US military accepted MW bioeffects 25 years ago, says Tim Rifat
in Remote Viewing.
Home Electrical Appliances by Alasdair and Jean Philips;
Anne Silk reports on an IEE meeting assessing EMR, antenna design
and mobile phone health implications;
Alasdair Philips gives an initial review of research reported at
a Gothenburg conference on mobile phones; London conference: 'Mobile
phones - is there a health hazard?';
Middleton Gap fiasco exposes National Grid Company's hidden, wasteful
agenda; MORI poll highlights health fears among mobile users;
Local Government Authority advocates a precautionary approach in
planning advice;
Prime Minister Tony Blair's mast request rejected;
Ultraviolet blood irradiation's treatment range includes MRSA, hepatitis,
TB, cancer, HIV/AIDS;
New UK Institute for Magnet Therapy; VDU trial shows Tecno device
protects users.
Nos 3-4 (£5.00p)
Living near overhead powerlines does increase cancer risk, re-analysis
of UK Childhood Cancer Study reveals [Exclusive];
Prof Henshaw replicates electric field link with powerline leukemia;
Henshaw rejects Electricity Association criticism over leukemia-powerline
link;
Yorkshire Public Inquiry abandoned - Nat Grid money overpowers democratic
system;
Henshaw forces NRPB to change its press statement;
New evidence of mobile phones' effect on brain function presented
to Prof Stewart's group;
Stewart Report to call for tougher action;
Update on EU Report advises research on non-thermal effects;
Swiss set very strict levels in line with Eastern non-thermal standards;
Russia rejects 'harmonisation' of standards with West despite conference
pressure;
Pulsed MWs reduce rat long-term memory;
School bans mobile phones on health grounds as student muggings
increase; Union warns members to cut mobile phone use;
Ear exposure exceeding limits causes US manufacturers to move goal-posts;
Scottish Parliament report backs full planning for masts; Tories
propose extending appeals procedures against masts; Fayed loses
mast appeal; Environmental law course on base stations; Dept of
Health response to Select Committee Report on Mobile Phones; BT/TETRA
contract;
Radiation varies by 20-fold across 25 phones in major German study;
EC Project SARSYS aims on standard for assessing mobile phone emissions
and effects;
EU judges condemn Switzerland over gagging of Dr Hans Hertel's research
exposing
microwave oven hazards;
Magnet therapy trials explored at first international conference
in US;
Dr Hulda Clark arrested in United States; UK newsletter devoted
to her EM 'zapping' treatment.
VOLUME 11,
2000
No
1. (£4.00)
Stewart Report on Mobile Phones endorses precautionary approach;
High electric field exposure increases cancer risk in utility workers;
Stewart Report on Mobile Phones: a critique by Roger Coghill;
NRPB report on RF near base stations; TETRA goes ahead despite no
scientific research;
Vatican sued over transmitter linked to cancer cluster; Antenna
engineers' health problems;
New Cherry report on RF/MW antenna hazards;
Beware Which? reports of remote earpieces on mobile phone
radiation;
Large Swedish study confirms mobile phone health hazards;
5th Annual International London Conference: 'Mobile Phones: is there
a health hazard?'; Misleading document on masts issued by DETR Minister
to Council leaders and MPs;
Dr Preece's evidence for increased lung cancer supports Henshaw's
theories;
Where are the UK Childhood Cancer Study's electric field results?
Non-thermal heat-shock response to microwaves;
Light pioneer Dr John Ott dies; Dr Hulda Clark released from jail;
Alternative cancer seminar in London includes Clark's parasite 'zapping'
therapy, UV blood irradiation, ozone and oxygen therapies.
Nos 2-4 (£4.00)
AGNIR Report's major bias and flaws misrepresent ELF EMF cancer
risk, by Alasdair Philips;
Angelos takes on US mobile phone giants in billion-dollar hazards
case;
DoH invites proposals for £7m mobile phone research program;
German study links mobiles to uveal melanoma;
Beware SARs from dual-mode mobiles; SAR values website
UKCCS finds leukaemia proximity link, by Alasdair Philips;
Childhood leukaemia linked to night-time magnetic field exposure;
'Pseudo-iron deficiency' under pylons;
Concerned police assess TETRA health hazards as trials continue;
DTI Select Committee criticises DETR planning proposals;
Mast Action UK launched; Telecoms riggers await case outcome against
BBC, NTL, etc;
Study finds leukaemia peaks with historical rise in electricity
use;
REVOLT calls in police to eject Nat Grid personnel; Three 'negative'
mobile phone studies;
Dr George Carlo's new book reveals US mobile phone industry's tactics;
Boosted HAARP signal could 'slice through ionosphere'; USAF develops
microwave 'zapper' for crowd control;
Distance-related effects near radio and TV transmitters - new evidence
indicates possible mechanism, by Dr Cyril Smith;
Cancer incidence near radio and TV transmitters in the UK - new
findings; Vatican Radio reduces transmissions;
Pioneering UK researcher Dr Stephen Perry dies.
VOLUME 12,
2001
No 1 (£5.00)
International Agency for Research on Cancer classifies ELF EMFs
'possible human carcinogens';
Professor Sir Richard Doll answers Philips' criticisms of AGNIR
Report on ELF EMFs;
Philips
comments on Doll's reply;
House of Commons document on powerlines misleads over AGNIR's findings;
UKCCS electric data to be published soon;
Appreciation: Dr Stephen Perry;
Riggers to appeal rejected case over RF hazard;
NRPB's TETRA document is badly 'flawed'; Dolphin Telecom files for
bankruptcy;
Brain tumour rises significantly in Swedish phone users; Trends
children's use of mobile phones;
Revised UK Planning Policy Guidance 8 for mobile phone masts issued;
Roger Coghill and Anne Silk report on the annual Bioelectromagnetics
Society conference in the USA.
No 2 (£5.00)
Californian Report endorses Extremely Low Frequency EMFs as
potential carcinogens: Professor Denis Henshaw summarises and comments
on its findings;
Mobile phone low-height base station emissions exceed new Planning
Policy Guidance levels;
NRPB re-thinks TETRA pulsed signal; Mobile phone health research
meeting;
'Mobile phones: Is there a health risk?' conference reports by Alasdair
Philips and Anne Silk; Children's heads absorb 50% more mobile phone
radiation than adults';
Shift work increases risk of breast cancer in women new studies
show;
ELF EMFs and Neurodegenerative Disease by NRPB, reviewed
by Anne Silk;
Campaign for Planning Sanity upcoming London meeting.
Nos 3-4
(£6.00)
Exclusive: TETRA health risks report rattles police and Home Office
agendas;
New Mobile Telecommunications and Health Research programme;
Philips' comments on Home Office's replies to Trower's questions;
TETRA vs TETRAPOL; Conference: Electromagnetic Environments and
Health in Buildings;
Two mobile phone mast conferences; Non-thermal MW effects on nematode
worms published; NRPB to be part of new agency; Peak magnetic field
exposure raises miscarriage risk;
Symposium launches new EMF research centre;
Anne Silk reviews Radiation - At home, outdoors and in the workplace;
EMF cancer/ALS link; Cherry ill; US FTC attacks EMR protectors;
Dr Hyland responds to COST281 attack on his STOA report; Bill aims
to change law on mast applications; Vatican Radio 'immune from prosecuition';
US research shows mobile phones can cause cancer; 2-minute call
alters a child's brain activity for one hour.
Volume
13,
No 1 (£5.00)
TETRA health
fears and masts delays force Police to re-assess options;
DTI refuses to identify tested products in limited study of mobile
phone protectors;
Mobile phone radiation from train passengers can exceed international
limits;
New low SAR phone;
Results of children's exposure study re-submitted;
Publication of Hardell research improves mobile phone lawsuit;
WHO Director-General admits sensitivity to mobile phone radiation;
Church of England opposed for allowing masts on steeples;
Judge upholds health fears as valid objection;
UK's first straw-fired power station; Riggers lose appeal;
'Suddenly awake at night' questionnaire;
Australian judgment sets public exposure to magnetic fields at level
of Doll Report;
Toroidal fields may explain mobile phone effects, suggests Dr Cyril
Smith;
Children's low visual acuity linked to display screen use and poor
diet;
Finnish study shows mobile phone radiation damages human cells;
Low freq uency vibration stimulates bone growth in children with
cerebral palsy and new osteoporosis therapy.
VOLUME
13
No 2
(£5.00)
Sitefinder database
changes masts’ references so check-up is impossible;
International EMF researchers agree EMF risks and launch commission
to protect public;
Drivers using mobiles to risk heavy fines if not using hands-free;
US mobile phone case rejected on lack of evidence
Police pro-TETRA conference dismissive of health risks;
Health concerns upheld in rejected TETRA case;
Mobile Telephone Health Research group adopts cynical funding tactic;
Many mobile phone masts exceed ETSI guidance levels;
Californian Health Report confirms a range of hazards from power
frequency EMFs;
'Electromagnetic Environments and Health in Buildings';
'Powerlines and Health: addressing the public concerns';
UKCCS electric field study finally published;
The Woman Who Knew Too Much;
Calcite microcrystals discovered in the pineal;
Flawed Australian study attempts replication of Rapacholi results
on lymphoma in mice;
Russians object to US HAARP developments.
Nos
3-4 (£5.00)
Protestors march
in London to change mast planning laws
Rail Track flout planning law by sleight of hand
TETRA roll-out postponed in West Country due to planning problems
Campaigners challenge DTI survey's confusing results
Masts sabotaged in Northern Ireland - and Britain
Neuronal damage detected in rats' brains at 1,000 times below mobile
phone radiation guidance
Private audit exposes TETRA's deficiencies
Prof William Stewart to become Chairman of NRPB
Powerwatch develops new Acousti-COM; Independent advisor?
Proposed radar at Fylingdales raises serious health concerns;
Applying the Precautionary Principle to EMF hazards by Prof Mike
O'Carroll
Freiberger Appeal to reduce MW radiation exceeds 1,000 medical signatures
Dr Graheme Blackwell assesses study on calcite microcrystals found
in human pineal for the first time
VOLUME 14
No 1 (£5.00)
Wrong magnetic flaws Nat Grid-funded study’s ‘negative’ powerline
spin
NRPB assesses comments on consultative document on EMFs at home
and at work
WHO appears to backtrack on Precautionary Principle; Prof Blakemore
to be new MRC chief
Short-term exposure to mobile phones affects sexes differently
Drivers to be fined for using hand-held mobiles but not hands-free
Family's symptoms disappear behind mesh screen
Fear of incompetent methodologies in £5m Home Office TETRA
studies
To boil or not to boil? Will we control our environmental hazards
in time? Alasdair Philips reviews The Boiled Frog Syndrome
New Mild study confirms previous cancer link
NRPB chiefs' attempts to placate over mobile phone masts hit vocal
opposition at Wishaw meeting
Electric field in childhood cancer divides two old adversaries
Tribute to Dr Neil Cherry by his colleagues.
No
2
(£3.00)
New Dutch Ministry of Health study finds effects from 3G signal
at 1V/m
Wishaw residents rally support to stop re-erection of felled mobile
mast
Judge threatens to sue neighbour over TETRA mast
Another mast felled at Dibden, Southampton
Hampshire TETRA live after Airwave erect secret aerials
TETRA opposition succeeds in Sussex as protest groups and action
escalates
Scottish anti-TETRA group formed, while top oncologist Sir David
Lane raises TETRA health fears
Welsh Inquiry into TETRA in January
NRPB's response to Dutch study and promise of new report
Hospital infections - is the solution in the air?
Launch of Radiation Research Trust
'Electrosensitivity: real or imagined?' seminar report
The microwave radiation threat from telecoms base station near
railways - Dr Douglas Ford assesses the dangers; Network Rail postpones
roll-out.
Nos
3-4
(£5.00)
NRPB reduces 0-300 GHz guidance levels in line with ICNIRP
RF health hazards from mobiles and masts not proven, concludes
NRPB report
NRPB dismisses health hazards from powerline particle disposition – Prof
Henshaw responds
Inspector overturns TETRA mast decision in Sussex despite opposition
GRAMM lose Welsh Inquiry over TETRA
MWs disrupt robins' migratory geomagnetic sense
Children with Leukemia International Conference, Sept 6-10th, 2004
WHO Workshop on children's sensitivity to EMFs
Dr Cyril Smith reviews Energy Medicine in Therapeutics and Human
Performance
by Dr James Oschmann
Mobile phone radiation vastly increases cellular attraction forces
VOLUME
15
No 1
Childhood cancer
nearly twice as likely within 100m of UK powerlines –
leaked result of largest-ever UK study still awaiting publication
after 3 years since completion
Two fit police officers under 43 using TETRA die of cancer in
the throat, five others diagnosed with other cancers
Extremely Low Frequency stakeholders' group launched
Regular use of a mobile phone can reduce sperm count by 30 percent
All-Party Parliamentary Mobile Group Report on masts
Conservatives launch campaign to give locals more say over masts
UKIP MP supports anti-TETRA protestors
TETRA conferences: September 24 (Aintree); 25th (Bristol)
Electrosensitivity seminar, London, September 11
US Journal of Alternative and Complementary Medicine's special
issue Vol 10, no 1: 'Bioelectromagnetics and the Medicine of Light'.
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