What is harmful for male fertility: cell phone or the wireless Internet?
Research
RF Safe Research Library
Jan 1, 2015
This cross-sectional study of men attending an infertility clinic assessed associations between self-reported mobile phone and wireless Internet use and semen parameters. Mobile phone usage period was not significantly associated with sperm count or morphology, while motility showed a borderline association. Higher…
The Validity and Reliability of the Persian Version Test of Mobile Phone Dependency (TMD).
Research
RF Safe Research Library
Jan 1, 2015
This cross-sectional study developed and validated a Persian version of the Test of Mobile Phone Dependency (TMD) in 350 Tehran university students. Factor analysis identified three factors and the scale showed high internal consistency and moderate test-retest reliability. The authors report a best cut-off point of…
Enhanced liver fibrosis (ELF) test in obese children with ultrasound-proven liver steatosis.
Research
RF Safe Research Library
Jan 1, 2015
This cross-sectional study evaluated the Enhanced Liver Fibrosis (ELF) test in 58 obese children stratified by ultrasound evidence of liver steatosis. Children with steatosis had higher liver enzymes and a higher ELF value than those with normal ultrasound findings. Despite these differences, the authors report that…
Using mobile phones and social media to facilitate education and support for rural-based midwives in South Africa.
Research
RF Safe Research Library
Jan 1, 2015
This cross-sectional survey assessed how rural-based advanced midwives in South Africa perceive and use mobile phones for education and professional activities. Among 56 respondents, most reported frequent use of mobile phone functions to support work and learning despite low self-rated technology competence and…
Correlates of mobile phone use in HIV care: Results from a cross-sectional study in South Africa.
Research
RF Safe Research Library
Jan 1, 2015
This cross-sectional study surveyed 883 HIV-infected patients on ART in Soweto, South Africa, to identify demographic correlates of using mobile phones as reminder tools. Older age, female gender, and lower education were associated with lower use of phones for clinic appointment reminders. Older age and lower income…
The Impact of Using Cell Phones After Light-Out on Sleep Quality, Headache, Tiredness, and Distractibility Among Students of a University in North of Iran.
Research
RF Safe Research Library
Jan 1, 2015
This cross-sectional study surveyed 358 university students about cell phone use after lights-out and related symptoms. Sixty percent reported late-night phone use, which was associated with insomnia, and initially with low energy, tiredness, and headache. After controlling for stressful events, only the association…
Sleep quality and general health status of employees exposed to extremely low frequency magnetic fields in a petrochemical complex
Research
RF Safe Research Library
Apr 29, 2014
This cross-sectional study measured ELF magnetic flux density in a petrochemical complex substation environment and assessed workers' sleep quality (PSQI) and general health (GHQ). It reports significant differences between case and control groups, with more sleep disorder and poorer health status in the case group.…
Assessment of auditory evoked potential in long-term mobile phone users.
Research
RF Safe Research Library
Jan 1, 2014
This cross-sectional study assessed auditory brainstem responses in 173 long-term mobile phone users aged about 17–39 years. The authors report significant differences in ABR wave and interpeak latencies across age groups, with prolonged average wave I–V latencies in the 20–29 year group. They interpret the latency…
Effect of mobile phone usage time on total antioxidant capacity of saliva and salivary immunoglobulin a.
Research
RF Safe Research Library
Jan 1, 2014
This cross-sectional study assessed whether daily mobile phone usage time is associated with salivary total antioxidant capacity in 105 volunteers. Participants were divided into three groups by usage, and total antioxidant capacity was measured using the FRAP method. The study reports a statistically significant…
Is smartphone a necessity or luxury among orthopedic specialty?
Research
RF Safe Research Library
Jan 1, 2014
This cross-sectional questionnaire study assessed how orthopaedic residents and consultants in Karachi used smartphones for clinical work and academics. Most respondents owned smartphones and reported using apps and internet/email, but fewer used them to share clinical data. The paper does not assess electromagnetic…
The Relationship between Mental Health and Addiction to Mobile Phones among University Students of Shahrekord, Iran.
Research
RF Safe Research Library
Jan 1, 2014
This cross-sectional survey examined associations between mobile phone addiction-related behaviors and mental health symptoms among 296 university students in Shahrekord, Iran. Several mobile phone addiction behavior categories were reported to be significantly inversely correlated with mental health scores. The…
Interference between active implanted medical devices and electromagnetic field emitting devices is rare but real: results of an incidence study in a population of physicians in France.
Research
RF Safe Research Library
Jan 1, 2014
This cross-sectional incidence survey used a postal questionnaire to assess physician-observed interference incidents between EMF-emitting devices and active implanted medical devices (AIMDs) in France. Among 1,188 participating physicians, 16% reported AIMD failures, typically of moderate severity but sometimes…
Symptom attribution and risk perception in individuals with idiopathic environmental intolerance to electromagnetic fields and in the general population.
Research
RF Safe Research Library
Jan 1, 2014
This cross-sectional study compared EMF-related health perceptions and symptom attribution among self-identified EMF-sensitive individuals from an internet panel, non-sensitive individuals, and an NGO-recruited IEI-EMF group. The internet-panel sensitive group reported more non-specific symptoms, higher perceived EMF…
Exposure Knowledge and Risk Perception of RF EMF.
Research
RF Safe Research Library
Jan 1, 2014
This cross-sectional survey study (LEXNET project) examined how subjective exposure knowledge relates to risk perception (RP) for different RF EMF sources. Respondents were more concerned about base stations than other sources. Regression results suggested that most exposure-characteristic features (except distance)…
General practitioners' knowledge and concern about electromagnetic fields.
Research
RF Safe Research Library
Jan 1, 2014
This cross-sectional survey sampled general practitioners in Germany to assess EMF knowledge and its relationship to concern about EMF health risks. Four latent knowledge groups were identified, with 43.1% giving mainly correct answers and 14.0% answering mostly "don't know". Concern was not related to knowledge…
Epidemiological characteristics of mobile phone ownership and use in korean children and adolescents.
Research
RF Safe Research Library
Jan 1, 2013
This cross-sectional analysis used three Korean databases (2008–2011; n=21,693) to describe mobile phone ownership and use among children and adolescents and how these patterns vary by socioeconomic position. Ownership and use were higher among females, older students, and in 2011 compared with 2008, and the age of…
Would pulsed radiofrequency applied to different anatomical regions have effective results for chronic pain treatment?
Research
RF Safe Research Library
Jan 1, 2011
This retrospective cross-sectional study evaluated pulsed radiofrequency (PRF) for chronic pain in patients who did not respond to conventional treatment. Across 24 patients treated at different anatomical regions, 66.7% reportedly achieved at least a 50% reduction in VAS pain scores over a mean follow-up of 8.5…
Parenting by cell phone: parental monitoring of adolescents and family relations.
Research
RF Safe Research Library
Jan 1, 2009
This cross-sectional questionnaire study of 196 parent–adolescent dyads examined how cell phone calling patterns relate to perceptions of truthfulness, parental knowledge, and family relationships. More frequent parental calling was associated with lower perceived truthfulness, and calls made when upset were linked…
Are people living next to mobile phone base stations more strained? Relationship of health concerns, self-estimated distance to base station, and psychological parameters.
Research
RF Safe Research Library
Jan 1, 2009
This cross-sectional study surveyed 57 participants about perceived proximity to mobile phone base stations, EMF-related concerns, and psychological strain, and also collected saliva biomarkers. Self-declared base station neighbors (≤100 m) showed higher salivary alpha-amylase and higher symptom checklist scores on…
Mobile phone technology for children with type 1 and type 2 diabetes: a parent survey.
Research
RF Safe Research Library
Jan 1, 2009
This cross-sectional web-based survey assessed parents' concerns about managing their children's diabetes and their attitudes toward a mobile-phone-integrated glucometer service that could transmit real-time glucose readings. Parents most commonly reported concerns about access to their child's health care provider,…
Survey of ownership and use of mobile phones among medical science students in Yazd.
Research
RF Safe Research Library
Jan 1, 2009
This cross-sectional survey assessed mobile phone ownership and use patterns among 309 medical science students in Yazd using a self-administered questionnaire. The abstract reports descriptive statistics on daily talking time, music listening, texting, and common locations of phone use. While the paper references…
The effect of postoperative immobilization on the healing of radiofrequency heat probe modified tissue: assessment of tissue length, stiffness, and morphology.
Research
RF Safe Research Library
Jan 1, 2008
This animal study examined how postoperative immobilization affects healing after radiofrequency heat probe shrinkage in rabbit patellar tendons. Tendon length increased across all groups by 8 weeks, but 4 weeks of immobilization resulted in less elongation than free activity. Immobilized groups had reduced…
Adverse effects of excessive mobile phone use.
Research
RF Safe Research Library
Jan 1, 2008
This cross-sectional questionnaire study surveyed 286 medical students about mobile phone use and health complaints. The abstract reports multiple self-reported symptoms (including impaired concentration, memory disturbances, sleeplessness, fatigue, and headache) and notes that 44.4% of respondents attributed their…