» Articles » PMID: 20409037

Risk and Benefit Perceptions of Mobile Phone and Base Station Technology in Bangladesh

Overview
Journal Risk Anal
Specialty Public Health
Date 2010 Apr 23
PMID 20409037
Citations 3
Authors
Affiliations
Soon will be listed here.
Abstract

Research in developed countries showed that many citizens perceive that radio signals transmitted by mobile phones and base stations represent potential health risks. Less research has been conducted in developing countries focused on citizen perceptions of risks and benefits, despite the recent and rapid introduction of mobile communication technologies. This study aims to identify factors that are influential in determining the tradeoffs that Bangladeshi citizens make between risks and benefits in terms of mobile phone technology acceptance and health concerns associated with the technology. Bangladesh was selected as representative of many developing countries inasmuch as terrestrial telephone infrastructure is insubstantial, and mobile phone use has expanded rapidly over the last decade, even among the poor. Issues of importance were identified in a small-scale qualitative study among Bangladeshi citizens (n = 13), followed by a survey within a sample of Bangladeshi citizens (n = 500). The results demonstrate that, in general, the perceived benefits of mobile phone technology outweigh the risks. The perceived benefits are primarily related to the social and personal advantages of mobile phone use, including the ability to receive emergency news about floods, cyclones, and other natural disasters. Base stations were seen as a symbol of societal advance. The results furthermore suggest that overall risk perceptions are relatively low, in particular health risks, and are primarily driven by perceptions that related to crime and social inconvenience. Perceived health risks are relatively small. These findings show that risk communication and management may be particularly effective when contextual factors of the society where the system is implemented are taken into consideration.

Citing Articles

Personal Exposure Assessment to Wi-Fi Radiofrequency Electromagnetic Fields in Mexican Microenvironments.

Ramirez-Vazquez R, Gonzalez-Rubio J, Escobar I, Suarez Rodriguez C, Arribas E Int J Environ Res Public Health. 2021; 18(4).

PMID: 33673014 PMC: 7918906. DOI: 10.3390/ijerph18041857.


Engaging Patients through Mobile Phones: Demonstrator Services, Success Factors, and Future Opportunities in Low and Middle-income Countries.

Hartzler A, Wetter T Yearb Med Inform. 2014; 9:182-94.

PMID: 25123741 PMC: 4287059. DOI: 10.15265/IY-2014-0022.


Factors influencing societal response of nanotechnology: an expert stakeholder analysis.

Gupta N, Fischer A, van der Lans I, Frewer L J Nanopart Res. 2012; 14(5):857.

PMID: 22822302 PMC: 3397131. DOI: 10.1007/s11051-012-0857-x.