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Do we understand 'risk' of mobile phone use?


By Michael Blastland
What should we make of recent news reports speculating about whether mobile phones cause cancer? It's all about how we deal with uncertainty, says Michael Blastland in his regular column.
How risky is it if you don't know the risks?
Daft question? Possibly. But perhaps it helps define who we are. Here is an exercise which invites you to a little self-diagnosis of your attitudes towards risk.
Mobile phones may cause brain cancer. "Shock warning!" said one newspaper when it reported this last week. "Shock U-turn" said another. Others seemed more sanguine.
Why the difference? Because all were reacting in their own way to ignorance. As this BBC report and others, like the Guardian's Ben Goldacre, pointed out, we simply don't know how risky mobile phone are.
So the word "may", as in the BBC headline "may cause cancer", is everything. Is it scary? Or reassuring? What if we turned it round and said "may not cause cancer"?
Risk often isn't about hard numbers - often there are no hard numbers - it's about how we react to uncertainty, given how the uncertainty is presented to us.
The graphic below is based on an illustration famously used by Prof John Adams, a writer about risk, for the cover of a book - called Risk, naturally.
As this graphic suggests, what we know is negligible. The rest, as Prof Adams puts it, is darkness.
The data he cited - about five million known chemicals (the whole area of the graphic), 7,000 tested for carcinogenicity (the yellow rectangle), 30 known to cause cancer in humans (the tiny orange area at the top left) - is a little old now. But his argument stands. Scroll down.
Cancer risk graphic
So does the darkness - the huge grey area - say to you "worry"? Or does it say "relax"? The less conclusive the science, the more our personal biases and presumptions - filters, Adams calls them - come into play. These are optimism, pessimism, trust or mistrust of authority, desire for personal control, and so on.
These are what often define riskiness for us. And so by helping to reveal them, our attitude to risk helps tell us who we are.
Mobile phone keypadThe classification of mobile phone risk has not changed, whatever news reports might imply
The International Agency for Research on Cancer (IARC) puts risks in one of five categories - carcinogenic, probably carcinogenic, possibly carcinogenic, not classifiable or probably not carcinogenic.
Mobile phones are "possibly" and so also, logically, "possibly not". That classification has not changed, despite recent news reports. Didn't know before, don't know now.
Scary headlines based on nothing new are nothing new, if you see what I mean. But newspapers won't be alone in taking the view that "don't know = grounds for fear", believing an "admission" of uncertainty makes the world more dangerous.
It's worth pointing out too that the IARC classification is not about how big a risk is, simply about how strong the evidence is that there is a risk, whether big or small.

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Arguments about risk are seldom settled by evidence”
We'd probably have an idea by now if any risk attached to mobile phones was big (unless the damage waits for old age). We haven't found it despite looking pretty hard.
Brain cancer is rare, about 10 cases in every 100,000 people. Let's say heavy mobile phone use doubles that risk over 20 years. Not true, so far as we know, but let's run with it. That would mean that among 100,000 heavy phone users, the number of brain cancers would rise from 10 in 100,000 to 20 in 100,000.
Does that reassure you? Or by failing to rule out a risk of unknown size, has it simply raised your suspicions?
It would be a surprise if any evidence here persuaded anyone out of a view they already held, and in any case it's not meant as a recommendation.
Arguments about risk are seldom settled by evidence - partly because the evidence can be fiendishly hard to detect or agree. What's left is how we feel in the dark.

From : BBC

Budho Majhi Launched In Majhi Comunity Bhirkot


Arjun Apawad
                Dolakhali poet Bishnu Subedi's 4th poem collection Budho Majhi (Old Fisherman) launched in Bhirkot fisherman community on Jun 17, 2011. Simh Bahadur Majhi, 105 launch collection on the Launched ceremony.  Majhi is indigenous tribe in Nepal. The collection's main poem is about the sorrow of majhi's trditional occupation." I decided launched collection in majhi community because characters know about thier status in literature" said poet Bishnu subedi.
Simha bahadur majhi (left) launched collection poet Bishnu Subedi ( 3rd  from Left ) 


Really no oppourtinity in Nepal?....

Thousands of youth going aboard daily for employment believed that there is no opportunity for employment in nation. In this situation Dolakha Boch VDC's Tejendra bahadur Kc , 34 started fish farming on his own village after return foreign  employment. His business give income from last year. 
He joined government service in 2057 on human right commission serve 18 months. after than he join Nepal army. he resigned from Nepal army & flying Afghanistan for security in charge.  
He came back Nepal and going to Kalanki for visiting He impressed there with fish farming. " I saw the golden opportunity in this business and started. " he said 

Half of muddy roads are useless

In Bhimeshwar municipality Dolakha, more than 50 percent muddy roads are useless which are constructed in different times. 
In municipality area more than 85 km roads are constructed till now with Lamosanghu-Jiri pitch road . Difficulty less than half roads are use for transportation. Municipality's spokesperson Madhab Subedi said. The lack of political long term view roads are constructed in every year. But doesn't give any profit. Subedi said.   

Mobile phone use may cause cancer: WHO


Mobile phone users may be at increased risk from brain cancer and should use texting and free-hands devices to reduce exposure, the World Health Organisation's cancer experts said.
Radio-frequency electromagnetic fields generated by such devices are "possibly carcinogenic to humans," the International Agency for Research on Cancer (IARC) announced at the end of an eight-day meeting in Lyon, France.
Experts "reached this classification based on review of the human evidence coming from epidemiological studies" pointing to an increased incidence of glioma, a malignant type of brain cancer, said Jonathan Samet, president of the work group.
Two studies in particular, the largest conducted over the last decade, showed a higher risk "in those that had the most intensive use of such phones," he said in a telephone news conference.
Some individuals tracked in the studies had used their phones for an average of 30 minutes per day over a period of 10 years.
"We simply don't know what might happen as people use their phones over longer time periods, possibly over a lifetime," Samet said.
There are about five billion mobile phones registered in the world. The number of phones and the average time spent using them have both climbed steadily in recent years.
The CTIA-The Wireless Association dismissed the report saying the UN agency "conducts numerous reviews and in the past has given the same score to, for example, pickled vegetables and coffee."
This classification "does not mean cell phones cause cancer," the industry association said in a statement, noting that "limited evidence from statistical studies can be found even though bias and other data flaws may be the basis for the results."
The IARC cautioned that current scientific evidence showed only a possible link, not a proven one, between wireless devices and cancers.
"There is some evidence of increased risk of glioma" and another form of non-malignant tumour called acoustic neuroma, said Kurt Straif, the scientist in charge of editing the IARC reports on potentially carcinogenic agents.
"But it is not at the moment clearly established that the use of mobile phones does in fact cause cancer in humans," he said.
The IARC does not issue formal recommendations, but experts pointed to a number of ways consumers can reduce risk.
"What probably entails some of the highest exposure is using your mobile for voice calls," Straif said.
"If you use it for texting, or as a hands-free set for voice calls, this is clearly lowering the exposure by at least an order of magnitude," or by tenfold, he said.
A year ago the IARC concluded that there was no link between cell phones and brain cancer, but that earlier report was criticised as based on data that was out of date.
The new review, conducted by a panel of 31 scientists from 14 countries, was reached on the basis of a "full consensus," said Robert Baan, in charge of the written report, yet to be released.
"This is the first scientific evaluation of all the literature published on the topic with regard to increased risk of cancer," he said.
But the panel stressed the need for more research, pointing to incomplete data, evolving technology and changing consumer habits.
"There's an improvement in the technology in terms of lower emissions but at the same time we see increased use, so it is hard to know how the two balance out," Baan noted.
The IARC ranks potentially cancer-causing elements as carcinogenic, probably carcinogenic, possibly carcinogenic or "probably not carcinogenic". It can also determine that a material is "not classifiable".
Cigarettes, sunbeds and asbestos, for example, fall in "Group 1", the top threat category.
Cell phones now join glass wool and gasoline exhaust in Group 2B as "possibly carcinogenic".
Industry groups reacted cautiously, pointing to other common consumer items -- including coffee and vegetables pickled in chemicals -- that are included in the same category.
"In France, the health ministry already applies a precautionary approach to cell phones because it considers that no danger has been established, that doubts remain and, thus, that more research is needed," the French Federation of Telecoms said in a statement.
Some consumer advocacy groups said the new classification was overdue.
"As of today, no one can say the risk does not exist, and now everyone -- politicians, telecoms, employers, consumers and parents -- have to take this into account," said Janine Le Calvez, head of PRIARTEM, a consumer advocacy group concerned with cell phone safety.

Tree Planting Program Organized


Arjun Apawad 
On the occasion of fourth Republic Day Dolakha Mirge's Akashganga HRELIC Organized tree planting ( Briksharopan ) program on May 29. 
On the briksharopan program around 300 different kinds of trees are sapling in the Kalidhunga community forest's muddy road. "To decrease the soil erosion because of the muddy road HRERLIC organized Briksharopan program" said vice Chairman Deepkumar Dahal. According to Dahal in the program around 20 people are participated.