Yale study: Cellphone use in pregnancy may be bad for babies’ health


Yale study says unborn mice exposed to cellphone radiation experienced changes in part of the brain responsible for hyperactivity.

Pregnant women may have something new to worry about: a new study suggests keeping a cellphone close to the belly could affect the unborn baby’s health.

Researchers from the Yale School of Medicine studying mice found that exposure to cellphone radiation during pregnancy affected the offspring’s brain development and could cause hyperactivity and memory problems.

“It’s probably safer for a pregnant woman not to carry their cell phone clipped to their belt or sleep with the phone near their abdomen unless it’s turned off,” said study author Dr. Hugh Taylor.

“Fetuses’ developing brains are fragile and more vulnerable than adults, so it is prudent to keep the phone at a distance.”

The study, published Thursday in Scientific Reports, found the cellphone exposure affected the development of neurons in the same region of the brain responsible for attention-deficit hyperactivity disorder.

Taylor cautioned that further testing is needed in humans to better understand the mechanisms behind the findings and to establish safe exposure limits during pregnancy.
Nevertheless, he and other experts said it would be smart for expectant moms to keep the cellphone far from their baby bump.

“I also ask my pregnant patients not to stand in front of their microwaves directly, and when they carry their phones not to carry them on their waist,” said Dr. JillRabin, head of urogynecology at Long Island Jewish Medical Center.

 “It’s not that we have absolute proof, but these studies are being done and we may end up finding out there are issues with these exposures.”

HaixiaWang, who is expecting her first child in two weeks, said she has held her phone to her baby to play classical music and wasn’t alarmed by the latest research.

“You see so many studies,” said Wang, 39, director of forecasting for a Wall Street marketing firm. “It’s good to be cautious, but you can go overboard with worry. At night and when I’m sitting at my desk, I do put it far away from me.”

Dr.Howard Minkoff, chairman of obstetrics and gynecology at Maimonides Medical Center in Brooklyn, where more than 7,000 babies are born every year, said the developing science in this field is worth watching.

An 2010 study on humans found that exposure to cell phones before birth and afterward may increase a child’s risk for developing hyperactivity, inattention, and problems getting along with peers.

“In the absence of definitive data for our patients, we fall back on old aphorisms — everything in moderation,” said Minkoff.

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