VIDEO - News Media

Note there many renowned epidemiologist specialists and neurosurgeons who are being quoted from, or interviewed, in the videos you can watch below.

Dr. Vini G. Khurana, Dr. Charles Teo, Dr. Richard G. Bittar, Dr. Leonard Hardell, Dr. Bruce Armstrong, Dr. Debra Davis, and Dr. Elisabeth Cardis (Former Interphone Coordiantor and is a Canadian Scientist). 

The videos speak of the increased risk in  developing GLIOMA and related ACOUSTIC NEUROMA cancers and the urgency to take precautions, especially with children. Children are at the highest risk because scientists agree that any cancer will not be detectable for at least 10 years after exposure.

   Video Links - watch online.

 

CBC's Marketplace 'Are cellphones really safe for your kids?' aired JAN. 23, 2009.  An investigation on the cellphones-for-kids phenomenon.  New evidence is uncovered about possible health risks for children who use cellphones on a long-term basis.  It’s a journey that ends in a presentation of our evidence to the Canadian Wireless Telecommunications Association. You’ll want to hear what they have to say. 

 

Australia - '60 Minutes' Television segment.  Unequivocally a true 'wake up call' for those that still question whether EMR is potentially harmful.  from APRIL 3, 2009.  View part of the transcript below which warns us on the impending epidemic that could be worse than smoking cigarettes ever was.

 

Australia - 'Lateline' Television segment.  Once again, a well researched, balanced reporting revealing a turn in the tide with scientific evidence; why some scientists who have been downplayed, are now being affirmed/confirmed by other respectable peers. This is a revealing 20 min segment.  A must see.  APRIL 3, 2009. 

 

Flash Video Overview of BIOPRO and it's technologies.

Flash Video Overview of BIOPRO's iH2O.

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TRANSCRIPT OF VIDEOS

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Selected transcripts

AUSTRALIA '60 Minutes' -

Wake Up Call

Friday, April 3, 2009

Full transcript here.

LIAM BARTLETT: Doctor Teo, John insists his brain tumour has been caused by his mobile phone. Do you agree with his diagnosis?

DR CHARLIE TEO: Insist is a strong word, and there are always two sides to every story. But if the question is do I believe that mobile phones can cause brain cancer, the answer is yes, I do. The fact that you've (John) deteriorated so much in the last three days means you probably won't survive for three more weeks with this. It's that bad.

JOHN BRYANT: Yeah, I know it's bad.

LIAM BARTLETT: Dr Charlie Teo is John's neurosurgeon, his last hope to beat the tumour. He's also the co-author of a frightening new study that's predicting a dramatic increase in brain tumours caused by the long-term use of mobile phones.

DR CHARLIE TEO: That's a huge fear. I mean, what if what if we're right? Then if we're right we're going to see a huge increase in brain tumours and brain cancer in the next decade or so. It's going to be frightening. And guess what, Liam, we're already frightened by what were seeing.

LIAM BARTLETT: Most of us are pretty wary of these things and with good reason. Microwave ovens use electromagnetic radiation to cook your food. Now, it's exactly the same energy, on exactly the same wave length, as the stuff that's being pumped out of your mobile phone. Admittedly these are a lot more powerful, but you wouldn't consider for a moment holding your ear up to one of these for hours at a time, day after day. Yet, that's precisely what most of us are doing with our mobiles.

DR VINI KHURANA: Long-term use of mobile phones is associated with a doubling of the risk of being diagnosed with certain brain tumours.

LIAM BARTLETT: You're saying if you use a mobile phone over an extended period...

DR VINI KHURANA: Right, over 10 years.

LIAM BARTLETT: ..you double your risk of a brain tumour.

DR VINI KHURANA: That's what the data that we have analysed, that's what it shows.

LIAM BARTLETT: Canberra neurosurgeon Dr Vini Khurana worked with Charlie Teo and three other leading scientists to produce this latest report. and he believes mobile phones could be the biggest public health issue since tobacco. Were you surprised at the size of the result?

DR VINI KHURANA: I actually think it may be a conservative estimate.

LIAM BARTLETT: You think doubling the risk is conservative?

DR VINI KHURANA: Yes. I would be very happy to be wrong about this because the public health implications of being right about this are enormous. At the moment there are just over four billion users of mobile phones. There are people as young as three using them.

LIAM BARTLETT: And that's where the biggest threat lies - with our kids. Today, being presented with your first mobile is an essential passport to life. Our kids inhabit a wireless world. And it's nothing for them to spend hours each day chatting on the phone.