| Literature DB >> 29056311 |
Mireille B Toledano1, Anssi Auvinen2, Giorgio Tettamanti3, Yang Cao4, Maria Feychting3, Anders Ahlbom3, Karin Fremling3, Sirpa Heinävaara5, Katja Kojo6, Gemma Knowles7, Rachel B Smith7, Joachim Schüz8, Christoffer Johansen9, Aslak Harbo Poulsen10, Isabelle Deltour8, Roel Vermeulen11, Hans Kromhout11, Paul Elliott7, Lena Hillert12.
Abstract
This study investigates validity of self-reported mobile phone use in a subset of 75 993 adults from the COSMOS cohort study. Agreement between self-reported and operator-derived mobile call frequency and duration for a 3-month period was assessed using Cohen's weighted Kappa (κ). Sensitivity and specificity of both self-reported high (≥10 calls/day or ≥4h/week) and low (≤6 calls/week or <30min/week) mobile phone use were calculated, as compared to operator data. For users of one mobile phone, agreement was fair for call frequency (κ=0.35, 95% CI: 0.35, 0.36) and moderate for call duration (κ=0.50, 95% CI: 0.49, 0.50). Self-reported low call frequency and duration demonstrated high sensitivity (87% and 76% respectively), but for high call frequency and duration sensitivity was lower (38% and 56% respectively), reflecting a tendency for greater underestimation than overestimation. Validity of self-reported mobile phone use was lower in women, younger age groups and those reporting symptoms during/shortly after using a mobile phone. This study highlights the ongoing value of using self-report data to measure mobile phone use. Furthermore, compared to continuous scale estimates used by previous studies, categorical response options used in COSMOS appear to improve validity considerably, most likely by preventing unrealistically high estimates from being reported.Entities:
Keywords: Cellular phone; Electromagnetic fields; Radiofrequency; Telecommunications; Validation
Mesh:
Year: 2017 PMID: 29056311 DOI: 10.1016/j.ijheh.2017.09.008
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Int J Hyg Environ Health ISSN: 1438-4639 Impact factor: 5.840