People have
worried for decades that electromagnetic radiation from power lines and
other sources increases risk for cancer. Those concerns appeared
to be justified by two scientific papers written by Robert P. Liburdy,
PhD, and published in 1992. But an investigation by government scientists
recently found Dr. Liburdy falsified data used in his research.
Dr. Liburdy's papers included data describing a cellular process in
the human body that could be affected by electromagnetic fields and how
damage to that process could lead to cancer. An investigation by the Office
of Research Integrity, an arm of the US Department of Health and Human
Services, recently found Dr. Liburdy excluded data that did not support
his conclusions linking cancer and electromagnetic fields.
Dr. Liburdy?s methods were questioned by a whistleblower shortly after
his papers were published. Then, in July 1995, the Lawrence Berkeley Laboratory
in Berkeley, CA, where he worked, found Dr. Liburdy had falsified data.
The laboratory then notified the Office of Research Integrity.
In announcing findings of its own investigation, the Office of Research
Integrity said Dr. Liburdy had "engaged in scientific misconduct in biomedical
research by falsifying and fabricating data and claims about the purported
cellular effects of electric and magnetic fields."
Dr. Liburdy resigned from his position as a cell biologist at the Lawrence
Berkeley Laboratory earlier this year. He has denied any wrongdoing but
has agreed not to contest the findings of the government scientists and
that he will not apply for federal funding for three years. Meanwhile,
nearly two dozen other studies conducted in recent years have found no
link between electric power lines and cancer, and many researchers now
believe electromagnetic fields are safe.
Scientists at the National Institute of Environmental Health Sciences
(NIEHS) reviewed and analyzed existing data on the issue several months
ago and concluded the evidence of electric and magnetic fields around power
lines causing cancer and other human disease is weak. But the NIEHS
report stopped short of stating there is definitely no link. In fact,
NIEHS noted there are some "lingering concerns" and efforts to reduce exposures
should continue.
This issue is not easy for experts to assess for the public, said Michael
Thun, MD, vice president of epidemiology and surveillance research for
the American Cancer Society (ACS). "Scientists have difficulty describing
an appropriate level of concern for exposures like electromagnetic fields,
because there are no tools to prove absolute safety, and scientists vary
somewhat in how they interpret the same set of data," he said.
Dr. Thun concluded the new report provides a more accurate reflection
of the situation. "The NIEHS report clarifies that the evidence linking
electromagnetic fields and cancer is ?weak? -- not totally absent, but
by no means persuasive nor even suggestive that power lines cause human
cancer," he said.
ACS News Center stories are provided as a source of cancer-related
news and are not intended to be used as
press releases.
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