In 2015, researchers at the Johns Hopkins Kimmel Cancer Center in the United States suggested that the majority of cancers are due to “bad luck.”

This article challenges that widely publicised claim, asking if it really is just “bad luck that a young man who has been using his phone for hours a day since age 8 is diagnosed with deadly brain cancer at age 23? Or that a 21-year old young woman suddenly develops multiple breast cancers directly under the antennas of the phone she had stored in her bra? Or that a 24-year-old develops rectal cancer close to his blue-jeans back pocket now stamped with his phone’s faded outline?”…

“The World Health Organization reports a global increase of 13% in childhood cancer incidence. In the United Kingdom, rates of the same type of malignant brain cancer increased in regular cell phone users have risen while those of other forms of brain cancer have dropped. United States rates of malignant brain tumours have now surpassed leukemia as the top cause of cancer deaths in adolescents and young adults. Growing numbers of neurosurgeons believe that part of the explanation for this surge in gliomas lies in our love affair with phones. We have to ask whether they are right: does the unprecedented use of cellphones underlie these perplexing increases?”

https://thriveglobal.com/stories/bad-luck-cannot-explain-more-cancers-in-young-adults-and-teens/

https://www.theguardian.com/society/2015/jan/02/two-thirds-adult-cancers-bad-luck

“Bad Luck” Cannot Explain More Cancers in Young Adults and Teens

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