Jump to content

Could Wifi be harming YOUR health?


humble3d

Recommended Posts

Could Wifi be harming YOUR health?

Media and much more via the link below...

http://i104.photobucket.com/albums/m178/jezalmaarzoheten/animated%20gif/bbcam.gif

aujo1cP.gif

That’s what a growing number of people believe is triggering their headaches, nausea and crippling pain

The list of places off-limits to Mary Coales is extensive
The 63-year-old can’t go to theatres, restaurants, airports, or parks

Mary has electromagnetic hypersensitivity intolerance syndrome (EHS)

More than 3 million people think they have electro-sensitivity

The list of places off-limits to Mary Coales is extensive. The 63-year-old can’t go to theatres, restaurants, cinemas, airports, or parks.

If she has a hospital appointment, she has to wait outside the building until the very last moment, while trips to the supermarket are conducted at lightning speed.

Even walking down the road outside her house can cause a terrible shooting pain in her mouth — which is why, whenever she goes out, she wears a top made from a special gauzy silver and polyamide material.

Passers-by, the Cambridge graduate and former high-flying civil servant may look odd, but she insists that the fabric — called Aaronia Shield — is the only way she can protect herself from the radiation caused by wifi and mobile phone signals.

Like increasing numbers of people, Mary believes she suffers from electromagnetic hypersensitivity intolerance syndrome (EHS) — in other words, she thinks the electronic devices most of us rely on in our everyday lives are making her ill.

Up to 5 per cent of the population — more than 3 million people — believe they are affected by some degree of electro-sensitivity, an allergy to the radiowaves and microwaves emitted by devices.

These range from mobile phones to television screens and even light bulbs. The waves are a form of non-ionising radiation, designed to be too low in frequency to affect people.

However, EHS sufferers believe this low-level radiation is capable of causing harm, and report symptoms ranging from headaches, lethargy and nausea to breathing difficulties and even paralysis. They also fear the radiation may cause cancer, autoimmune diseases and neurological disorders in the long-term.

‘Before I developed EHS in 2012, I wouldn’t have believed the condition existed,’ says Mary. ‘The idea of becoming ill because of the technology I’d used for years without previously having any problems is surreal.

‘But the pain I’ve suffered is very real. At its worst, it has felt like I’m being tasered inside my mouth.

‘I’ve had to change my entire life to find ways to avoid being exposed to wifi and phone signals. Wifi is everywhere now, so it’s very difficult to avoid. It’s even more difficult to avoid people with mobile phones.

‘I hardly ever go to public places, and only go to friends’ houses if they have switched everything off beforehand.’

The highly controversial idea that electromagnetic fields can affect our health was first raised in the Sixties, when American doctor Robert O. Becker campaigned against electricity pylons, which he believed were causing illness to those who lived nearby.
DID YOU KNOW?

Worried that wifi may harm you? Sit 1m or more from the router and avoid using your laptop on your lap


In recent years, as the telecommunications industry has boomed, fears have also grown that the increased electromagnetic radiation caused by mobiles and wifi waves could be dangerous.

But there’s no escaping wireless technology in modern Britain. The number of wifi hotspots is set to rise to 21 million next year, and there are more mobile phone contracts than people.

While there is no concrete evidence of links between mobile technology and illness, studies have pointed to worrying effects.

A 2011 brain-scan study found that, in the presence of wifi radiation, male students’ brain activity was reduced in areas associated with paying attention.


The number of wifi hotspots is set to rise to 21 million next year, and there are more mobile phone contracts than people

Other research presented to the American Society for Reproductive Medicine in 2010 reported that wifi signals significantly dampened brain activity in young women when they were trying to repeat a series of numbers that had been read to them.

There has been enough anxiety to prompt the European Assembly to call for restrictions on wifi in schools and the use of mobile phones by children.

But EHS is not recognised as a medical condition in Britain — unlike in Sweden, where it is termed a disability.

Britain’s Health Protection Agency says there is no scientific evidence linking ill-health with electrical equipment, although it acknowledges people are reporting real and distressing symptoms.

Some doctors are voicing their concerns. Dr Andrew Tresidder, an NHS GP in Somerset, has seen many patients complaining of symptoms of EHS. ‘Electro- sensitivity is a very real illness,’ he says.

‘We don’t really know exactly how it happens, but, given how sensitive the cells in our bodies are to other types of energy waves, such as sound or light, it would be surprising if we weren’t sensitive to other kinds of frequency — such as radio waves.

‘I hope that, at some point soon, the NHS and Public Health England will be able to reconsider their current stance and start taking it seriously.’

When Mary Coales first began to experience a sharp pain in her mouth in October 2012, she attributed it to a reaction to chemicals in the flame-retardant foam material that her builders used to fill a hole in the kitchen wall.

Three months later, after having the material replaced, she suffered the same symptoms when she used her laptop, mobile and even television.

‘I began to wonder if my reaction was chemical after all, so I started to experiment on myself,’ says Mary, who lives by herself in London.

‘I went out for lunch with my niece, who had an iPad with her, and I held it close to my face. Immediately, I felt a sharp sting in my mouth. Suddenly, I couldn’t watch TV, use my computer, use a phone, or even switch on the lights in my house without pain. It was very frightening.’
DID YOU KNOW?

Using a mobile phone for more than ten years gives a 200 per cent higher chance of contracting brain tumours


Through a friend, Mary met a man with electrosensitivity, who introduced her to the society ElectroSensitivity UK, which has 1,000 members.

Mary says: ‘I also went to see my GP, and, although he took me seriously, he didn’t know what to do. I was offered cognitive behavioural therapy, used to treat people with psychological problems like depression, and it did nothing to address the actual sensitivity.’

Instead, she took advice from other sufferers. ‘I changed my light bulbs from compact fluorescent tubes to old incandescent or halogen bulbs, which emit lower levels of radiation,’ she says. ‘I had my wifi replaced with wired broadband, and a filter installed on my landline to remove the broadband signal from my phone line.

‘And I bought some Aaronia Shield fabric, which protects against waves, on the internet. It’s made in Germany and costs around £70 per yard.

‘I was told that, as I had a lot of metal fillings in my mouth, it would be a good idea to get rid of them, as they conduct electricity. Over six months, I had them removed and replaced with non-metallic ones. I also follow a very healthy diet.’

Mary believes she has reduced her symptoms, but her life is very difficult. She measures the waves around her to monitor their effect

Mary believes she has reduced her symptoms, but her life is very difficult. ‘I’ve had to give up a lot of things I loved, including the tour-guiding I did around the city of London,’ she says.

‘And my council is in the process of launching wifi across my entire district. Its IT department can’t guarantee it won’t appear on my street.’

some experts, however, are sceptical. Professor Malcolm Sperrin, medical physics director at the Royal Berkshire NHS Foundation Trust, says: ‘There’s no evidence of a correlation between wifi and mobile phone signals and illness.

‘The level of radiation from them is very low — in most cases, barely detectable. The intensity of wifi radiation is 100,000 times less than that of a domestic microwave oven.

People with EHS say their distress is very real

‘If electrosensitivity was real, we’d expect to have been seeing it since radios were first used a century ago.

‘My feeling is that the symptoms could be the result of people worrying about this technology, rather than the technology itself.’

But people with EHS say their distress is very real.

Musician and sufferer Ricky Gardiner, 66, who played guitar for Iggy Pop and David Bowie in the Seventies, now lives a quiet life in rural Carmarthenshire, West Wales with his wife, Virginia. His symptoms began in the late Eighties, and he believes they were caused by five computers he used to produce music.

‘It started as a strange warmth inside my body, but, by the mid-Nineties, I was very unwell, with an irregular heartbeat and breathing problems,’ he says

For many years, Ricky says, he was unable to work because of his illness.

‘I’ve tried everything,’ he says. ‘I’ve slept inside a canopy made from fabric to block out the radiation, and painted my house with a graphite paint.

‘I still use a computer for my music, but I don’t have wifi and I sit on the other side of the room from the monitor and use binoculars to see the screen.’

Although Ricky feels he is managing his condition, he is angry that EHS is not taken more seriously. ‘The telecoms industry is the biggest money-spinner the world’s ever known, so it’s easier to dismiss us as nutcases than question whether it’s right for us to be bombarded with electromagnetic waves,’ he says.

Sue Brown, 53, a married mother of two from Gloucester, would agree. She resigned as a teacher at a prestigious independent school three years ago after wifi was installed there, and has taken early retirement.

‘I’d always been very healthy, but then, for no apparent reason, I started to find it difficult to sleep at night,’ she says. ‘I developed terrible pains in my head and sometimes I’d feel nauseous.

I’ve slept inside a canopy made from fabric to block out the radiation, and painted my house with a graphite paint”
Ricky Gardiner, 66, from Carmarthenshire

‘My doctor gave me strong painkillers, but nothing worked. He wondered if I might have a brain tumour — but in the school holidays, the symptoms would almost disappear.

‘I loved my job, but had to resign. Later, I discovered from the school’s IT technician that wifi had been installed at the same time as my symptoms started.’

Sue’s symptoms eased after she left work, but returned when she had a new broadband hub installed in her home.

‘Now, I can hardly go anywhere, because wifi is so widespread. The symptoms are horrendous, but, when I talk about them, people look at me as though I’m mad.’

There may be no scientific evidence to prove the existence of electro- sensitivity, but Sue speaks for the growing community of sufferers when she says: ‘For us, this is very real.’

Check out the media and more via the link below...

http://www.dailymail.co.uk/femail/article-2846494/Could-Wifi-harming-health-Thats-growing-number-people-believe-triggering-headaches-nausea-crippling-pain.html
Link to comment
Share on other sites


  • Replies 15
  • Views 2k
  • Created
  • Last Reply

Hm, I sleep less than 5 feet away from my Wi-Fi router.

No effects noticed. Not sure I buy into the whole Wi-Fi/Cell Phones = Brain Cancer thing (maybe if they sent different frequencies more powerful than current stuff).

Link to comment
Share on other sites


It is hard not to laugh at old people who for some reason are the only ones who have EHS.

I have the feeling that EHS is something like religion.If you can't explain why you are getting sick, then blame it on things you don't understand :)

Link to comment
Share on other sites


It is hard not to laugh at old people who for some reason are the only ones who have EHS.

I have the feeling that EHS is something like religion.If you can't explain why you are getting sick, then blame it on things you don't understand :)

Wow, close your eyes much? Some people can feel these waves or becomes attuned to them. I for one sometimes feel when my phone connects via wifi..

I had a friend who could feel his cellphone's connection when it was close to his leg. These waves go through us I'd be surprised if nobody felt anything..

Just because you personally don't feel any effects doesn't mean you should poke fun at people who do. You think people just jump at the first thing they think causes the issue

without doing something as simple as I don't fucking know... TURNING OFF THEIR WIFI to see if the effect goes away?

Seriously to discredit what THOUSANDS of people claim they can feel and what they've discovered to be the cause I'd have to label you a bloody IMBECILE.

The more people who understand that there are things that occur outside of their own experience the better, anything else is just pure ignorance.

Link to comment
Share on other sites


Wow, close your eyes much? Some people can feel these waves or becomes attuned to them. I for one sometimes feel when my phone connects via wifi..

I had a friend who could feel his cellphone's connection when it was close to his leg. These waves go through us I'd be surprised if nobody felt anything..

Just because you personally don't feel any effects doesn't mean you should poke fun at people who do. You think people just jump at the first thing they think causes the issue

without doing something as simple as I don't fucking know... TURNING OFF THEIR WIFI to see if the effect goes away?

Seriously to discredit what THOUSANDS of people claim they can feel and what they've discovered to be the cause I'd have to label you a bloody IMBECILE.

The more people who understand that there are things that occur outside of their own experience the better anything else is just pure ignorance.

But too many studies prove the opposite, people who claim that they can feel electromagnetic fields couldn't actually tell if there really were electromagnetic fields or not in simple tests.

Of course it might affect your health on a long term, which is not proven yet. But i simply don't believe anyone who claims that they can feel electromagnetic fields. Maybe it is because i don't understand why it would affect you and not thousand others, it is not like that your body has a 6th sense for electromagnetic fields.

Without researching too much on the web, as long as this is not proven, i would say that it is the same as if someone says "he can feel god" where as so many others say they don't even believe in god.

Seven studies were found which did report an association, while 24 could not find any association with electromagnetic fields. However, of the seven positive studies, two could not be replicated even by the original authors, three had serious methodological shortcomings, and the final two presented contradictory results. Since then, several more double-blind experiments have been published, each of which has suggested that people who report electromagnetic hypersensitivity are unable to detect the presence of electromagnetic fields and are as likely to report ill health following a sham exposure, as they are following exposure to genuine electromagnetic fields.

So please, if you claim that you can feel it when you enable/disable your wifi on your phone, then feel free to join studies and prove everyone wrong :)

Link to comment
Share on other sites


Wow, close your eyes much? Some people can feel these waves or becomes attuned to them. I for one sometimes feel when my phone connects via wifi..

I had a friend who could feel his cellphone's connection when it was close to his leg. These waves go through us I'd be surprised if nobody felt anything..

Just because you personally don't feel any effects doesn't mean you should poke fun at people who do. You think people just jump at the first thing they think causes the issue

without doing something as simple as I don't fucking know... TURNING OFF THEIR WIFI to see if the effect goes away?

Seriously to discredit what THOUSANDS of people claim they can feel and what they've discovered to be the cause I'd have to label you a bloody IMBECILE.

The more people who understand that there are things that occur outside of their own experience the better anything else is just pure ignorance.

But too many studies prove the opposite, people who claim that they can feel electromagnetic fields couldn't actually tell if there really were electromagnetic fields or not in simple tests.

Of course it might affect your health on a long term, which is not proven yet. But i simply don't believe anyone who claims that they can feel electromagnetic fields. Maybe it is because i don't understand why it would affect you and not thousand others, it is not like that your body has a 6th sense for electromagnetic fields.

Without researching too much on the web, as long as this is not proven, i would say that it is the same as if someone says "he can feel god" where as so many others say they don't even believe in god.

Seven studies were found which did report an association, while 24 could not find any association with electromagnetic fields. However, of the seven positive studies, two could not be replicated even by the original authors, three had serious methodological shortcomings, and the final two presented contradictory results. Since then, several more double-blind experiments have been published, each of which has suggested that people who report electromagnetic hypersensitivity are unable to detect the presence of electromagnetic fields and are as likely to report ill health following a sham exposure, as they are following exposure to genuine electromagnetic fields.

So please, if you claim that you can feel it when you enable/disable your wifi on your phone, then feel free to join studies and prove everyone wrong :)

I'll leave these here.

"I am an electrical engineer. I love technology and cannot part with it. I am also very electromagnetically sensitive. I did it to myself via over usage, now I can’t even be in a room with WiFi. I wired my whole house with wired Ethernet and got rid of all the wireless phones and installed wired phones. My symptoms did eventually decrease but they didn’t go away altogether. There is a cell tower that I can see from my house, about a mile away. I was considering shielding the house, but before I got into that I did a little experiment to see how well the shielding would work."

"If you become oversensitive to WiFi signals and 3G, 4G it is difficult to become ok again - so please do not use it in your home. Join a local activist group - they need your support to protect the community and to raise awareness. I use landline and almost never a mobile. Life is fine without! :"

I suspected this 20 years ago, when I first used a rented cell phone for business travel. When I bought my first cell phone, as I have electromagnetic sensitivity, I called Motorola about the possible dangers of these devices. They assured me they were perfectly safe. Not!

"I had a similar experience. I got my first cell phone in 2000, as it was a requirement for a new job. My first conversation on it was in a low-signal-strength area and went over 20 minutes. The phone was pushing out more power to compensate for the distance to the tower, and the inner shielding was becoming saturated. I terminated the call because my ears were getting hot."

“Towards the end of my normal life when I still could watch television I could actually cut my pain off and on with the remote control device,” she says. “It was such an enormously clear association there was just no denying it.”

As of 2010, Popular Science writes in an earlier article, Sweden is the only country the formally acknowledging EHS as a disease associated with electromagnetic fields."

Okay so cellphone signals are obviously a different beast, I won't speculate as to how much of an impact that plays vs WIFI, I have no idea. What I do know is that high power wireless signals are something to be mindful of. FWIW I have an Netgear Nighthawk not 1 meter from my head, I don't always keep it's WIFI enabled but when it's on I can't say I feel anything, If I am sensitive to it it's not by much.

I don't rule any possibilities out.. Do your own tests. Nobody really knows the answers right now, but I won't ever scoff at other people's first hand experiences..

Link to comment
Share on other sites


I also had an unusual event when first using a cell phone...

As i put the phone up to my ear, an electrical type of shock hit my ear...

It was Sort of like a static electricity shock...

Something told me this was not good; So, I try to avoid wireless devices

when ever possible...

If for only peace of mind... I prefer to go non wireless...

Link to comment
Share on other sites


I also had an unusual event when first using a cell phone...

As i put the phone up to my ear, an electrical type of shock hit my ear...

It was Sort of like a static electricity shock...

Something told me this was not good; So, I try to avoid wireless devices

when ever possible...

If for only peace of mind... I prefer to go non wireless...

For me I noticed the bad effect of a cell phone since a long time ago, I was having a partial headache near the ear I was using for calls for long periods (I was talking for 2 till 3 hours some times )

Link to comment
Share on other sites


For last 10 years, now I know why? I always wake up in the morning with a huge Bonner. :doh: Now I think It must has to do something with the Wi-Fi and wireless devices I have in my house. :unsure:

Link to comment
Share on other sites


Archived

This topic is now archived and is closed to further replies.

  • Recently Browsing   0 members

    • No registered users viewing this page.
×
×
  • Create New...