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Friday, May 17, 2013

Reports about mobile phone calls cause an increase in blood pressure

Mark Bridge writes:

I was on the radio for a few minutes this morning. Nick Ferrari on LBC 97.3 FM was talking to me about a recent survey that noted a rise in blood pressure when people received calls on their mobile phones. As I waited to go on-air, a producer asked me what I thought. “Storm in a teacup”, I said. Well, it seemed better than “Makes my blood boil”.

At least LBC spent a few minutes looking into the story, which came from the annual American Society of Hypertension meeting in San Francisco. That’s more than some newspapers have done. The Daily Mail chose a headline of “Talking on a mobile phone can give you high blood pressure due to the stress it can cause”. Yet the research wasn’t about talking but answering. The Telegraph has “Mobile phones cause blood pressure to rise”, which is worryingly vague. Why am I being cynical about these stories?  To start with, the research was conducted on people who were taking medication for already-diagnosed hypertension. The purpose was to see whether answering a phone call during blood pressure monitoring would affect their readings.

Yes, their blood pressure was affected by receiving a call. Readings rose rose from an average of 121/77mmHg to 129/82. That wouldn’t worry me too much - after all, the NHS says any reading below 130/80 is considered to be normal - but it’s a much bigger deal if you’re taking medication and your doctor wants a consistent, accurate measurement.

Dr Giuseppe Crippa, who heads the hypertension unit at Guglielmo da Saliceto Hospital in the Italian city of Piacenza, conducted the research. He’s quoted as saying “This phenomenon might lead to misinterpretation and overestimation of the real patients’ blood pressure status. We believe that it is important to advise all patients to turn off their phone before entering the doctor’s office.”

That’s sensible advice. In fact, I’d say that’s the appropriate conclusion to be drawn at the moment.

After all, the study was of just 94 people... all of whom were receiving phone calls during blood pressure monitoring from a number they didn’t know. Interestingly, people who used their mobiles more than 30 times a day weren’t as dramatically affected as those who used their phones less.

Would a similar result have been noted if the patients had witnessed an unexpected event when watching television - perhaps during a news programme or an action film?  Would a fixed-line phone have had the same effect?  I don’t know. That’s something for another study.

Health professionals often talk of ‘white coat syndrome’ or ‘white coat hypertension’, which refers to an increase in blood pressure experienced by some patients when they’re in a clinical setting. It sounds as though an unexpected phone call can have similar effects.

In fact, I wonder what happens to blood pressure when people read about health scares in newspapers?

[Crippa Giuseppe , Zabzuni Dorjan, Cassi Antonino, Bravi Elena; Mobile Phone Calls Acutely Increase Blood Pressure Levels in Hypertensive Subjects [abstract]. Journal of Clinical Hypertension 2013;15 Suppl 1 :74]

Mark Bridge is not a health professional, although he is a big fan of 24 Hours in A&E. He’s a freelance technology writer and also produces podcasts for The Fonecast every week.
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Opinion Articles

Hanging on the Telephone

Are we waiting for mobile marketing to make a move?

Mark Bridge writes:

At the beginning of the 21st century I moved from Vodafone to work for its Vizzavi multimedia portal, wooed by talk of context-specific advertising that would one day use a customer’s location and search history to ensure any ads were precisely targeted. And I’m not the only person who’s been seduced. Consumers, ad agencies, client companies and mobile networks have all been promised much by mobile marketing.

Yet more than a decade later that kind of sophistication seems to be lacking from most mobile marketing messages.

Author: The Fonecast
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Last week at The Fonecast: 29th April 2013

Money, messaging, microphones and M2M

Mark Bridge writes:

This week there was only one set of financial results that attracted the mainstream tech media. Apple reported the first drop in quarterly profit for several years as figures fell by 18% to around £6.1 billion. On the positive side, it made around £6.1 billion profit. It also announced dates for its developer conference in June and promised a new version of iOS.

Author: The Fonecast
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Fixed line nightmares vs simple mobile

...and why Mobile Termination Rates need to fall

James Rosewell writes:

Due to growth in staff numbers my business (51Degrees.mobi) is in the process of moving offices. Coincidentally I'm also moving our home broadband. It’s not been a pleasant experience.

This got me thinking, because a few weeks ago on thefonecast.com we discussed why Ofcom isn’t treating Mobile Termination Rates (MTR) in the same way as fixed-line termination rates. The mobile industry justifies higher MTRs on the assumption that a mobile network costs more to run than a fixed-line network. It was certainly true when the fixed costs of running a mobile network had to be shared across a relatively small number of customers, even if they did pay a fortune for their contracts and terminals. Intuitively I'd say that’s just not true anymore.

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Last week at The Fonecast: 22nd April 2013

Spring in the air

Mark Bridge writes:

The past few days have seen the arrival of two familiar seasons. Not only has the sun peeked its head from behind the clouds in an approximation of Spring but the mobile industry has been releasing its quarterly results.

Author: The Fonecast
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Last week at The Fonecast: 15th April 2013

Going up...

Mark Bridge writes:

It’s claimed there’s recently been some dodgy equine activity in the mobile industry. No, I’m not talking about the dancing pony that promoted Three UK. I’m not even making lasagne jokes. I’m talking about the ‘Trojan horse’ threatening to monopolise the mobile marketplace.

Author: The Fonecast
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A month of mobile: O2 counts on 3, Microsoft counts to 10 and Apple counts its profits

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