Zhang noted that the study was based on data collected from 2010 to 2011, when smartphones were first introduced to the market. Back then, only a small proportion of people owned a smartphone. Therefore, if cell phone use increased the risk of thyroid cancer, it may have been due to the use of earlier generation cell phones that were more commonly used at the time of data collection.</ p>
Additionally, the transition to smart phones has also brought about a major change in the way cell phones are used (e.g. texting versus phone calls). As a result, the results of this current study warrant further evaluation in future studies, she said.
Of the other Yale School of Public Health researchers involved in the study include Jiajun Luo, Hang Li, Nicole Deziel, Huang Huang and Shuangge Ma. Researchers from China and Florida also co-authored the study.
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