Abstract

Mobile phone use, predominantly smartphones, is almost ubiquitous amongst both adults and children. However adults and children have different usage patterns. A major challenge with research on mobile phone use is the reliability of self-reported phone activity for accurate exposure assessment. We investigated the agreement between self-reported mobile phone use data and objective mobile operator traffic data in a subset of adolescents aged 11–12 years participating in the Study of Cognition, Adolescents and Mobile Phones (SCAMP) cohort. We examined self-reported mobile phone use, including call frequency, cumulative call time duration and text messages sent among adolescents from SCAMP and matched these data with records provided by mobile network operators (n = 350). The extent of agreement between self-reported mobile phone use and mobile operator traffic data use was evaluated using Cohen's weighted Kappa (ĸ) statistics. Sensitivity and specificity of self-reported low (< 1 call/day, ≤ 5min of call/day or ≤ 5 text messages sent/day) and high (≥ 11 calls/day, > 30min of call/day or ≥ 11 text messages sent /day) use were estimated.Agreement between self-reported mobile phone use and mobile operator traffic data was highest for the duration spent talking on mobile phones per day on weekdays (38.9%) and weekends (29.4%) compared to frequency of calls and number of text messages sent. Adolescents overestimated their mobile phone use during weekends compared to weekdays. Analysis of agreement showed little difference overall between the sexes and socio-economic groups. Weighted kappa between self-reported and mobile operator traffic data for call frequency during weekdays was κ = 0.12, 95% CI 0.06–0.18. Of the three modes of mobile phone use measured in the questionnaire, call frequency was the most sensitive for low mobile phone users on weekdays and weekends (77.1, 95% CI: 69.3—83.7 and 72.0, 95% CI: 65.0–78.4, respectively). Specificity was moderate to high for high users with the highest for call frequency during weekdays (98.4, 95% CI: 96.4–99.5).Despite differential agreement between adolescents’ self-reported mobile phone use and mobile operator traffic data, our findings demonstrate that self-reported usage adequately distinguishes between high and low use. The greater use of mobile smartphones over Wi-Fi networks by adolescents, as opposed to mobile phone networks, means operator data are not the gold standard for exposure assessment in this age group. This has important implications for epidemiologic research on the health effects of mobile phone use in adolescents.

Highlights

  • Mobile phone use is almost ubiquitous among adults and children, with over 90% ownership in adults and upwards of 75% in 12 to 15year-olds in the UK (Ofcom, 2015)

  • Perfect agreement between self-reported and operator–derived mobile phone use was highest for the duration spent talking on mobile phones per day on weekdays (38.9%) and weekends (29.4%) compared to frequency of calls and number of text messages sent

  • Studies assessing the validity of self-reported mobile phone use have compared with the software-modified phones (SMPs) as the “gold standard” (Inyang et al, 2009; Kiyohara et al, 2015) and the results are consistent with our findings

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Summary

Introduction

Mobile phone use is almost ubiquitous among adults and children, with over 90% ownership in adults and upwards of 75% in 12 to 15year-olds in the UK (Ofcom, 2015). The dose of RF-EMF that a regular mobile phone user is exposed to is difficult to measure as it is dependent on the frequency band, the power output of the mobile phone, and the duration and frequency of use. Depending on these parameters, a recent Swiss study in adolescents estimated an average whole body dose of 28 mJ/kg and an average brain dose of 190 mJ/kg from own mobile phone calls (Roser et al, 2017)

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