Non‑Thermal RF Biological Effects Are Documented—Thermal‑Only Wireless Safety Standards Are Not Scientifically Adequate
Research
Effect Synthesis
Mar 6, 2026
Synthesis of 13 curated studies (2006–2025) showing non-thermal RF effects—oxidative stress, fertility impacts, and animal tumor evidence—plus regulatory gaps. Conclusion: thermal-only RF limits are incomplete; precau…
Non‑Thermal RF Biological Effects Are Documented—Thermal‑Only Safety Limits Are Not a Complete Health Standard
Research
Effect Synthesis
Mar 1, 2026
Synthesis of 11 curated studies finds consistent evidence for non-thermal RF biological effects (oxidative stress, fertility impacts, and animal cancer signals) plus higher pediatric absorption—showing thermal-only RF…
Non‑Thermal RF Biological Effects: Cancer Signals in Long‑Term Bioassays and Reproductive/Developmental Harm Below Heating Thresholds
Research
Effect Synthesis
Mar 1, 2026
Evidence synthesis of 13 curated EMF/RF studies: high‑certainty animal cancer signals (glioma, heart schwannoma), high‑certainty male fertility impacts, and developmental/reproductive findings at low SAR—showing therm…
Non‑Thermal EMF Harm Signals (Moderate Evidence): Reproductive DNA Damage, Pregnancy Risk, Tumor Relevance, and Ecological Disruption
Research
Effect Synthesis
Mar 1, 2026
Synthesis of 13 moderate-evidence harm papers: 5G-band RF increased sperm DNA fragmentation in vitro; pregnancy cohort linked call time to miscarriage and growth outcomes; lifetime RFR tumor genetics support translati…
High-Certainty Harm Evidence: RF/EMF Exposures Linked to Cancer, Reproductive Damage, and Pregnancy/Child Risks—Why Thermal-Only Safety Limits Fail
Research
Effect Synthesis
Mar 1, 2026
Synthesis of 17 high-evidence EMF/RF papers: systematic reviews and major bioassays report increased tumors in male rats, reduced male fertility (including lower pregnancy rates), and elevated risks for miscarriage an…
Enzymatic debridement after mobile phone explosion: a case report.
Research
RF Safe Research Library
Jan 1, 2016
This case report describes a paediatric burn injury resulting from a mobile phone lithium-ion battery explosion. The patient was treated with selective enzymatic debridement, which the authors note is simple, minimally invasive, and safe. The report concerns an acute thermal injury mechanism rather than EMF exposure.