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Beyond Animal Research
By Jonathan Balcombe, Ph.D.
July 2004
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Animal Research and Mobile Phones: Getting
a Bad Connection
A recent article in the British Medical Journal asks “Where
is the evidence that animal research benefits humans?”1
The authors examined systematic reviews of six areas of animal research
and presented evidence that it had not informed human medicine.
For two of the six areas, clinical trials were conducted at the
same time as the animal studies, and for three others, clinical
trials went ahead despite evidence of harm from the animal studies.
Overall, the analysis reveals both a practical and a perceived disconnect
between animal and human studies. The authors conclude that “new
animal studies should not be conducted until...their validity and
generalisability to clinical medicine has been assessed.”
In light of these findings, I decided to follow up on a front-page
headline of this week’s Sunday Times (London, June
27): “Mobile phones can cut a man’s fertility by a third.”2
The study tracked 221 mobile phone-using men for 13 months. Was
this discovery connected with any animal studies, and if so, how
might they have informed the human research?
An online search revealed 24 studies published since 2002 on the
effects of cell phone radiation on rats and/or mice. These studies
examined cancer, hearing, pregnancy, nerve cell damage, and fertility.
Virtually no deleterious effects were reported. Of the two fertility
studies, one (2003) found that whole body exposure in rats had no
effect, and the other (2002) found that exposure to mobile phone
emissions actually increased fertility in a nematode worm.
One may ask what value these animal studies have. The rodent fertility
study did not reflect the latest clinical findings, and in any event
it seems to have been ignored by the clinical researchers. The Times
article made no mention of animal studies, and the two approaches
seem to proceed independently of each other.
Yet mobile phone research on rodents continues despite a ready
source of reliable clinical data available from the hundreds of
millions of people now using mobile phones. A study released in
2001 involved 420,000 mobile users, and a team at Nottingham University
is planning a new long-term study of 250,000 people. When it comes
to the animal studies, the line is busy but there’s a bad
connection.
1Pound P, Ebrahim S, Sandercock P, Bracken MB, Roberts I. Where
is the evidence that animals research benefits humans? British Medical
Journal 2004;328:514-517.
2Leake J. 2004. Mobile phones can cut a man's fertility
by a third. The Sunday Times 27 June, p. 1-2.
Jonathan Balcolmbe, Ph.D., is a PCRM research
consultant with background in ethology. He is the author of The
Use of Animals in Higher Education, as well as many articles
on humane life science education and scientific papers on animal
behavior.
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