LG -C900B User Manual
Page 79

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2. What is the FDA’s role concerning the
safety of wireless phones?
 Under the law, the FDA does not 
review the safety of radiation emitting 
consumer products such as wireless 
phones before they can be sold, as it 
does with new drugs or medical devices. 
However, the agency has authority to 
take action if wireless phones are shown 
to emit radio frequency energy (RF) at 
a level that is hazardous to the user. In 
such a case, the FDA could require the 
manufacturers of wireless phones to 
notify users of the health hazard and to 
repair, replace, or recall the phones so 
that the hazard no longer exists. 
 Although the existing scientifi c data 
do not justify FDA regulatory actions, 
the FDA has urged the wireless phone 
industry to take a number of steps, 
including the following:
• Support needed research into possible 
biological eff ects of RF of the type 
emitted by wireless phones;
• Design wireless phones in a way that
minimizes any RF exposure to the 
user that is not necessary for device 
function; and
• Cooperate in providing of wireless
phones with the best possible 
information on possible eff ects of 
wireless phone use on human health.
 The FDA belongs to an interagency 
working group of the federal agencies 
that have responsibility for diff erent 
aspects of RF safety to ensure 
coordinated eff orts at the federal level. 
The following agencies belong to this 
working group:
• National Institute for Occupational 
Safety and Health
• Environmental Protection Agency
• Occupational Safety and Health 
Administration (Administración de la 
seguridad y salud laborales)
• Occupational Safety and Health
Administration
• National Telecommunications and
Information Administration
The National Institutes of Health 
participates in some interagency working 
group activities, as well.
The FDA shares regulatory responsibilities 
for wireless phones with the Federal 
Communications Commission (FCC). All 
phones that are sold in the United States 
must comply with FCC safety guidelines 
that limit RF exposure. The FCC relies on the 
FDA and other health agencies for safety 
questions about wireless phones.
The FCC also regulates the base stations 
that the wireless phone networks rely 
upon. While these base stations operate at 
higher power than do the wireless phones 
themselves, the RF exposures that people 
get from these base stations are typically 
thousands of times lower than those they 
