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Monday 15 February 2016

Why I suspect Catalyst's WiFi episode will hurt - The perpetual story of fear

The ABC's primary science journalism series, Catalyst, is due to air a program warning of the health risks of wireless networking, this Tuesday night, on the 16th of February.

I haven't seen it yet, obviously. But I have, in a way. I feel like I've been watching it for five straight years, on repeat, with tiny variations in content and wording. It's another tiny chapter in the perpetual, thematically consistent presentation of a safe new technology as something we ought to fear. But scientific research points to these stories as being a major contributor to the phenomenon they're examining, creating a self-sustaining loop of fear and anxiety. Asking questions is fine, but this style of asking questions is causing demonstrable harm.

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Why it will hurt

A previous iteration of this perpetual program: in 2007, the BBC's Panorama, an investigative current affairs show, aired an episode about the health risks of WiFi. It relied heavily on an 'electrosmog' pressure group, and attacked experts. The episode spurred a barrage of complaints, which were upheld by the BBC's editorial complaints unit. Ben Goldacre, a UK science writer, wrote about it extensively, here.

More interestingly, that episode of Panorama was used in a scientific study examining the impact of misinformation on symptom reporting in people who claim to be hypersensitive to eletromagnetic radiation. The study was done by Witthoft and Rubin, in 2013.

Participants watched the Panorama WiFi episode, and a control film. They were then exposed to a 'sham' wifi signal - essentially, a placebo. People who watched the episode were significantly more likely to report symptoms from the fake wifi signal than those who hadn't:

"82 (54%) of the 147 participants reported symptoms which they attributed to the sham exposure. The experimental film increased: EMF related worries (β=0.19; P=.019); post sham exposure symptoms among participants with high pre-existing anxiety (β=0.22; P=.008); the likelihood of symptoms being attributed to the sham exposure among people with high anxiety (β=.31; P=.001); and the likelihood of people who attributed their symptoms to the sham exposure believing themselves to be sensitive to EMF (β=0.16; P=.049)"


The presentation of information can hurt. This isn't controversial anymore. Electromagnetic fields are a particularly tempting contender for this perpetual warning of impending suffering. Another study, from 2010, found the same thing, as did this study. A study in 2013, by Eldridge-Thomas and Rubin, examined newspaper reports, and found that:

"Articles which quoted someone with [intolerance to electromagnetic fields] were significantly more likely to report an electromagnetic cause and to present unproven treatments. Those which used a scientist as a source were more likely to present a non-electromagnetic cause for the condition. The widespread poor reporting we identified is disappointing and has the potential for to encourage more people to misattribute their symptoms to electromagnetic fields. Scientists should remain engaged with the media to counteract this effect"

Shockingly, 72% of the content they examined blamed electromagnetic fields, despite there being no evidence to suggest these are the physical cause of the phenomenon they describe, and plenty of evidence demonstrating that people report symptoms regardless of the presence of EMFs.

Suggestions and expectations of forecasted sickness can cause real sickness. People who suffer from anxiety and depression are at greater risk. This is a real thing that can be measured and published, and it's being maintained by this perpetual story: this new thing might hurt you.

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What it will look like

This is the format I predict the show will take:

- One or two 'experts', and one or two 'sufferers', all claim the technology is causing sickness. These people will be on-screen for the majority of the segment.

- A brief statement of what the majority of scientists think, maybe at the end, and only briefly.

- End with a reassertion of uncertainty: 'time will tell, but for now, be cautious'.

Catalyst's promotional segments for the story already suggest this format:


The promo features an interview with Dr Devra Davis, who's an outspoken critic of electromagnetic fields, and is currently on a tour around Australia, presenting the health risks of wireless devices:


A scientist from the Cancer Council, Professor Bernard Stewart, said “I am deeply disturbed by this (Dr Davis’ claims) because I do not think there is any medical or scientific research that justifies the anxiety of the community that is being raised. Clearly, Dr Davis is in the business of raising concern”. 'Patchd', a new device that claims to protect you from the terror of electromagnetism, was sending invites on behalf of Dr Davis (the tweet was since deleted). The company is now promoting the upcoming episode:

https://www.facebook.com/getpatchd/

It's going to be interesting to see whether Catalyst explores the links between this new company selling its wares, and any affiliations their interviewees might have. Not to say that there are any, but it's well worth asking the question.

There are a few things that I suspect Catalyst will almost certainly include, that serve as the vital ingredients for creating fear and anxiety, including the simulation of scientific uncertainty. These are 'fright factors', as explored in this paper:

"A diagnostic checklist of fright factors has helped to explain why some environmental health risks are more likely to trigger alarm, anxiety or outrage than others, independently of scientific estimates of their seriousness (Bennett 1999). Media stories that contain a large number of these fright factors provoke a strong public reaction (Bennett 2010). These fright factors have been shown in newspaper coverage of human papillomavirus (HPV) vaccination, avian flu, biosolids and genetically modified crops (Burke 2004, Goodman and Goodman 2006, Abdelmutti and Hoffman-Goetz 2009, Fung et al. 2011)"

The factors are:

- Involuntary exposure
- Inequitably distributed
- Inescapable by taking personal precautions
- Cause hidden or irreversible damage
- Pose particular danger to small children or pregnant women
- Arousing dread due to death, illness or injury
- Damage to identifiable victims
- Poorly understood by science
- Subject to contradictory statements from responsible sources
- Arise from unfamiliar or novel source
- Result from man-made sources

The research paper applied the above factors to media coverage of wind turbines in Canada - a technology that's an precise analogue of the same perpetual fear-based story: you should be scared of this new thing, because scientists are uncertain and some people feel sick.

In fact, comments posted on Catalyst's Facebook page already anticipate the episode will confirm and reinforce the fears held by people who claim sensitivity to electromagnetism:


Some of these themes already dominate the preview (include the classic image of a device radiating evil green waves), but I suspect the full episode will adhere more closely to the checklist of 'fright factors' than to the current scientific consensus on the safety of wireless technology.

The 'inescapable threat' graphic (I made this collection for this)
Catalyst's promo, featuring the same theme of 'inescapable threat' 

There's a chance I'm wrong, but I'd posit it's not a big chance. They might take the opportunity to fully explore the serious implications of expectations of harm, and psychological factors, with the preview cleverly baiting viewers expecting a scare-story on WiFi. Perhaps the warnings of harm are accurate, or even understated - WiFi might be reaching aggressively into our skulls and frying our neurons. In which case one would expect the purveyors of these warnings to be publishing research, and talking to the scientific community, rather than talking to the media and selling books. Perception is flawed. If we want to be sure, we place our theories in the imperfect but demonstrably useful crucible of the scientific method.

I'm not optimistic - the story is a perpetual one, updated to serve whatever anxieties dominate current discourse. At the moment, it's nervousness about the prevalence of smartphones in public spaces. Someone needs to jam a thick, jagged stick into the spokes of this wheel, because it causes real suffering, and it needs to end. Here's hoping Tuesday's episode doesn't add to the perpetual state of fear around new technology. 

11 comments:

  1. Given Maryanne Demasi's previous work on the dangers of statins got Catalyst a very public slapping - http://www.smh.com.au/national/health/abc-will-take-down-two-controversial-catalyst-episodes-on-heart-disease-20140512-zra0y.html - confidence on an even-handed approach here is minimal.

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  2. Agree with your concerns, particularly given the track record of Catalyst such as with its treatment of statins. In 1996, the predecessor of Catalyst, "Quantam" did a two part documentary on vaccines called "Vaccination: Protection at What Price" which purported to show 'two sides' of the vaccination debate as if that was balance, but essentially made them look pretty bad. http://www.worldcat.org/title/vaccination-protection-at-what-price-parts-1-and-2/oclc/221914472 I did an audience study on how mothers of new babies responded to some key segments published here http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/17052810 Risk perception studies have shown that perception of risk can be inversely correlated with perception of benefit. Hopefully that weighs in favour with wifi given the enormous convenience it brings but for a few, there will always be some who mistrust technology (as you know only too well, Ketan). I have found it helpful to read the writings of Giddens and Beck for understanding what is underpinning this at a societal level.

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  3. For too many, perception becomes reality as it is far easier than thinking for yourself and researching to find the truth.

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  4. I would reword "poorly understood by science" as perhaps "poorly explained by science." I mean, EM radiation and the biophysics of it are pretty well understood. There really aren't a lot of questions here.

    Having said that, if even a nominal science show on a public broadcaster won't give air time for good explanations, it's hard to see how scientists *could* take more responsibility for communication efforts.

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  5. Then there's the other type of "balance"- risk/benefit analysis. Even if there was good evidence that EMR caused cancer, (which there isn't), how would the risk balance against the enormous benefit that mobile communications has brought throughout the world - from impoverished communities to lost bush-walkers.

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  6. There is an extraordinary level of unease and hostility that ABC science program Catalyst has dared to examine the subject of the possible health risks of high exposure to WiFi, however eminent Australian neurosurgeon Dr Charlie Teo limits his children's exposure and he's no gullible 'tin-hat wearing' fool. Better safe than sorry.

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  7. tWell when One on One devotes a whole program to a con artist like John Edwards it should come as no surprise that Catalyst serves up this alarmist crap. Something seriously wrong at the ABC.

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  8. Your analysis is all fine and dandy except for one inconvenient fact. There is peer reviewed science demonstrating that non thermal EMF does affect the cell... both positive and negative. Suggest you start here - http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC3780531/

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    1. In vitro research results cannot be extrapolated to living/breathing human beings that have the benefit of blood circulation and homeostasis to cope with external stimuli. The article you cite is a review of cherry-picked studies with Pall's personal opinion. I suggest you start with expert panel reviews of the whole body of science here - http://www.ices-emfsafety.org/expert-reviews/

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  9. This episode of Catalyst should be nominated for the Australian Skeptics bent spoon award.

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  10. Why bio-indicators have been forgotten in this discussion?

    First a bio-indicator paper related to infrasound and wind power:
    http://docs.wind-watch.org/Euronoise2015-000601.pdf

    Secondly, a bio-indicator paper related to EMFs & chemicals :
    http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/26613326

    Thirdly, Wi-Fi related research findings:
    http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/22112647,26199911,24460421,22465825,24460421
    http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/24792079,26578367,23479077,26520617

    We have a science-based and health-related reason for concern. Talking about "scaremongering" does not help if necessary risk-management is not done.

    Best wishes from Finland

    Mikko Ahonen (PhD)

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