KYOCERA 2345 Manual De Usuario

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Section 15
100
Knowing Performance and Safety Guidelines
Consumer Update on Mobile Phones
FDA has been receiving inquiries about the safety of mobile phones, including 
cellular phones and PCS phones. The following summarizes what is known—and 
what remains unknown—about whether these products can pose a hazard to health, 
and what can be done to minimize any potential risk. This information may be used 
to respond to questions.
Why the concern?
Mobile phones emit low levels of radiofrequency energy (i.e.,radiofrequency 
radiation) in the microwave range while being used. They also emit very low levels of 
radiofrequency energy (RF), considered non-significant, when in the stand-by mode. 
It is well known that high levels of RF can produce biological damage through 
heating effects (this is how your microwave oven is able to cook food). However, it is 
not known whether, to what extent, or through what mechanism, lower levels of RF 
might cause adverse health effects as well. Although some research has been done to 
address these questions, no clear picture of the biological effects of this type of 
radiation has emerged to date. Thus, the available science does not allow us to 
conclude that mobile phones are absolutely safe, or that they are unsafe. However, the 
available scientific evidence does not demonstrate any adverse health effects 
associated with the use of mobile phones.
What kinds of phones are in question?
Questions have been raised about hand-held mobile phones, the kind that have a 
built-in antenna that is positioned close to the user's head during normal telephone 
conversation. These types of mobile phones are of concern because of the short 
distance between the phone's antenna—the primary source of the RF—and the 
person's head. The exposure to RF from mobile phones in which the antenna is 
located at greater distances from the user (on the outside of a car, for example) is 
drastically lower than that from hand-held phones, because a person's RF exposure 
decreases rapidly with distance from the source. The safety of so-called “cordless 
phones,” which have a base unit connected to the telephone wiring in a house and 
which operate at far lower power levels and frequencies, has not been questioned.
How much evidence is there that hand-held mobile phones might 
be harmful?
Briefly, there is not enough evidence to know for sure, either way; however, research 
efforts are on-going. The existing scientific evidence is conflicting and many of the 
studies that have been done to date have suffered from flaws in their research 
methods. Animal experiments investigating the effects of RF exposures characteristic 
of mobile phones have yielded conflicting results. A few animal studies, however, have 
suggested that low levels of RF could accelerate the development of cancer in 
laboratory animals. In one study, mice genetically altered to be predisposed to 
developing one type of cancer developed more than twice as many such cancers when 
they were exposed to RF energy compared to controls. There is much uncertainty