Tuesday, November 17, 2009

Parents threaten to remove children from Formby school over Wi-Fi installation



Article in http://www.liverpooldailypost.co.uk
Oct 21 2009 by Lyndsay Young, Liverpool Daily Post

PARENTS have vowed to take their children out of a Merseyside school if Wi-Fi laptops are installed.

They fear their children will be exposed to “emissions” from the 50 new wireless computers at Woodlands primary school, in Formby.

A petition signed by 32 parents was gathered against the equipment, which is set to be installed in the next week.

Phil Hughes, 58, a homeopath, said he selected Woodlands primary for his daughter Serena, nine, because there are no mobile phone masts nearby.

He said he will take his daughter out of the school if Wi-Fi is installed.

Mr Hughes is calling on staff to meet with parents before the equipment is put in place.

He said: “We have evidence in our possession showing there are levels of danger with Wi-Fi.

“We wanted a meeting to put our case to other parents. You cannot make a decision if you have not got all of the information.Parents should at least be informed.”

Andrea O’Shaughnessy, 39, and her husband William, 35, also vowed to take their two children out of the school and want laptops to be hardwired instead.

She said: “We decided we will take them out if Wi-Fi does go in.

“We believe it emits radiation and my fear is they would be around that for six hours a day, whether it is low level or not.

“It could show in 10 years’ time, when they get a brain tumour or some kind of cancer.

“They put asbestos in schools years ago and said it was safe, and it is only just coming out now it is not.”

Friday, October 30, 2009

你割咗未啊@千萬別割


文摘自
http://teongee.blogspot.com/2009/10/blog-post_31.html
2009年10月31日

你割咗未啊?的廣告主題,沒有出乎意料地,受到某些人以‘意識不良’為理由而做出抗議。周美芬開聲嗆了。但王國慧(檳州行政議員)卻認為這則廣告沒有什么不妥。兩人恰巧皆是“巾幗英雌”。這個隱藏著要割掉男人那一片皮的廣告,怎么沒有男人出來說上兩句話呢?

說的也是,這種隱隱約約的廣告說詞,就算是吵個三天三夜,我看也吵不出一個所以然來。淫穢與否,有時還得讓衛道人士或圣人賢者來作出評論。就像當年,一些組織和機關提倡使用安全套來預防致命的性病時,有些人便大力鞭撻,說這會是在鼓勵性愛自由,有違東方價值觀念。

用那片包皮來傳達訊息,這回也不是頭一遭。不久前,15Malaysia 的錄影短片里頭的 Potong Saga 也借用了這片包皮娛樂了不少國民。Yasmin Ahmad 在幾年前的一則廣告短片,也用了這包皮來傳達國民親善諒解的精神,感動了不少人。

在這里我們就談割不割。但不是談割包皮,而是談,割不割傳統的有線網絡連線( landline internet connection)。無線上網用的是電磁波。這電磁波和手提電話、家用無線電話和電訊塔的電磁波的性質是一樣的。國際電磁波輻射專業組織,至今發現有越來越多的危害健康的病例。但是,在一個科技是潮流、商業集團有力量的社會,就連應該如何小心和正確的使用,涉及電磁波輻射科技的勸告和注意事項也不受重視。

為了方便而盲目的使用無線上網科技,尤其是毫無節制地24小時暴露在電磁波輻射里,到時不單單只是割不割皮的小事,而是連“蛋”都會熟去。周美芬和王國慧應該更關注這一點。

Friday, September 18, 2009

抽煙和無線上網



文摘自光明日报专栏(作者:陈建业)

檳州政府揚言要把檳州打造成無煙州,近日來積極推廣各項禁煙運動,如擴大禁煙區、取締在禁煙區抽煙的煙客、鼓勵公務員參加戒煙課程等。

眾所週知,禁煙是一項不簡單的任務,我國政府多年來馬不停蹄禁煙,每年調高煙酒稅,如今更在煙盒外印上恐怖圖案,但都無法有效禁煙。

雖然科學研究已經證明抽煙危害健康,但是世界各國都不能做到全面禁煙,因為禁煙涉及侵犯個人自由的問題。檳州衛生委員會主席彭文寶也說,雖然當局要嚴厲執法,但是也必須顧及抽煙者的人權。

在民主的社會裡,每個人都享有個人自由,這包括選擇的自由,不管他的選擇是對或錯。雖然吸煙危害健康是事實,但是每個人還是有權力選擇要不要抽煙。

有人或許提出政府應該為了人民的健康著想而禁止人民抽煙,如果這說法成立的話,那政府也應該為了人民的健康著想而禁止人民喝汽水,或吃零食。

當然,有人會舉出二手煙損害其他人的健康。當一個人的行為已經對他人造成傷害時,政府就有干涉的理由。這也是各國政府都在做的事,包括檳州政府,就是不斷擴大禁煙區,但是為了尊重個人自由,則會增設抽煙區,讓煙客可以在不危害他人健康的前提來行使他們的自由權力。

我們在禁煙課題上知道如何尊重煙客的個人自由,為何在推行全檳無線寬頻上網計劃上卻沒有尊重不要無線寬頻者的個人自由呢?

檳州民聯政府想要推行全檳無線上網計劃,但這計劃受到少部份市民的反對,提出無線寬頻危害健康。檳州政府舉出科學證據表明無線寬頻對人體無害來回應。

這情況就像禁煙課題,雖然有科學證據證明抽煙危害健康,但是仍然有很多煙客選擇照抽不誤,這是他們的個人自由。

在全檳無線上網的課題上,同樣也有很多科學證據證明無線寬頻對健康無害,但是也同樣有一批人選擇不要被無線寬頻籠罩,這應該是他們的個人自由。

我們可以尊重煙客抽煙的自由,為何不能尊重人民不要無線寬頻的自由呢?

反對全檳無線上網計劃運動,其實與無線寬頻對健康有沒有害無關,因為這只會陷入永無止休的爭論。這只是州內一些人民在要求政府尊重他們不想被無線寬頻籠罩的自由權力。

檳州政府可以提出千萬個無線寬頻多好的理由,但是有些人就是不想被無線寬頻籠罩。在這方面,檳州政府應該仿傚設立禁煙區的作法,在檳州打造沒有無線寬頻籠罩的無無線寬頻區(Wifi Free Zone),讓那些不想要無線寬頻的人民可以享有選擇的自由。

煙客要抽煙可以去抽煙區,人民不要無線寬頻要去哪裡呢?

Saturday, September 5, 2009

Wi-fi - Why I Don`t Think It`s as Safe as We are Led to Believe



Article in http://bluejeansblog.com

August 30th, 2009 . Posted in blue jean

I spend several hours each day on my computer and I must admit I often feel very "weird".

When I explained my symptoms other than family members, which I dismissed as neurotic and mood when I get my bio Guard hanging on the neck to protect from electromagnetic fields.

If I use my cell phone to the left side of my face burning, my tongue and lips Tingle, I feel a tightness in the chest, as if I can not breathe well and gives me a strange pain in my left temple. I also feel sick and disoriented.

I get the same effect if I use my computer for any length of time, especially if I'm in the room where we installed Wi-Fi frame. For those unfamiliar with Wi-Fi stands for Wireless Fidelity and is a means by which people with laptops can move and still be able to access the Internet.

We used to use a cable broadband, but because there are three people who sometimes want to be on a team at the same time, we have found wireless.

But last night on TV there was a Wi-Fi program. that made me sit up and take notice, because we have some others who have experienced the same problems.

It seems likely that I suffer from electro sensitivity. Of course, I suspected for a long time, so I wear protective bio, but I've never done a wireless link established earlier. I always thought it was the computer.

In Sweden, the problem is recognized as an official disability and affects approximately 3% of the population. If a similar figure exists in the UK, I have about 2 million other women. It is therefore strange that the government now insists there are none.

I think not.

Of course, my skepticism might be because I have been personally affected by two procedures that the government also insists that they are "safe". I've written books on these two issues so I can say no - at least not now.

Both mercury from dental amalgams and maternal mortality are controversial issues and, despite the fact that affect millions of people around the world, the government insists that all evidence is "anecdotal".

Who am I to argue?

However, the government based on international guidelines in preparing their statements and the World Health Organization (WHO), which are a major public health organizations around the world have said that, provided that such Wi-FI and the radiation emitted by mobile phone masts, there is "no adverse health effects from exposure to low level long term."

Not me.

After all, how do they know? I'm certainly no expert, but WiFi and mobile phones is relatively new, so do not think anyone has lived, from the cradle to the grave to be exposed to substances that pose the question - What is the duration of the long exposure long term?

Again the experiments in Sweden have been conducted using the lower levels of radiation emitted by wi-fi and the result was the chromosomal damage, a decrease in short-term memory, electro hypersensitivity and increased cancer.

I met in the program that government guidelines are somewhat influenced by the industry and are based on the effect of "heat" instead of "biological effects" of these radio waves.

This means that in fact their bodies are heated before they can be considered dangerous enough to require restrictions on its use.

In most cities you can find Wi-Fi, where you can use your computer. Most people have no idea when they walk along they are exposed to radiation.

Even when I turn on my home computer, I said I'm in the range of different wireless connections than mine so clearly that I am not sure on the inside either. Infact when I was still connected to broadband internet through my neighbor came round with his laptop and was able to connect via Wi-Fi next door!

At the time I thought it was fantastic. None!

In schools also, it is increasingly common to install wireless networks, and currently about 70% of secondary and 50% of primary schools.

Now, parents express concern about the potential long-term health of their children. After all their skulls are thinner and still forming and until there is conclusive evidence of the contrary, "there are no known health effects" is not very reassuring statement.

Protests are held regularly in the establishment of mobile phone masts near schools, but most people do not WI-FI is equally dangerous. Apparently, the United Kingdom, where this program was produced (2007) had 3,000 points Wi-Fi and 50,000 mobile towers for mobile telephony.

On the agenda of a radiation monitor is placed near a laptop in a classroom in almost exact position on the head of a student. The result was that the student was exposed to 3 to 4 times more radiation than not stood in the main beam of a mobile phone mast.

Afraid, huh?

People have the option of using a mobile phone, but wireless networks in classrooms to delete this personal decision. The programmers did not say what level of exposure would not be any time but especially during downloads. However, as most people use computers for Internet access, which could very likely that a considerable amount of time.

Despite all this evidence "anecdotal," the government still insist on WI-FI is safe. Until the adverse health effects have been created in a laboratory and science can not prove that there is a risk that is likely to remain in place.

I think not. Do you?

Monday, July 27, 2009

I’m allergic to wi-fi waves



Torture ... wi-fi makes Steve Miller ill

Aricle on http://www.thesun.co.uk

By DAVE MASTERS
Published: 24 Jul 2009

FOR Steve Miller a trip to his local High Street is a living hell that makes him sick, dizzy and confused.

Pubs make him feel the same and he can't use trains, airports or hotels without experiencing head-banging agony.

But Steve doesn't suffer from some strange phobia. He is allergic to wi-fi.

And sadly for him - and the other two per cent of the population with Electromagnetic Hypersensitivity - the number of people pumping out the wireless internet signal is on the rise.

Steve said: "I feel like an exile on my own planet. It's almost impossible to find somewhere without wi-fi nowadays.

"If I fancy a pint I have to travel three miles to the only pub in my area that doesn't have it. I can't just go to the shops because huge parts of the High Street affect me.

"If I go somewhere, I can instantly sense the wi-fi and have to leg it."

Being extra-sensitive to this "electrosmog" has made moving house a nightmare for Steve, as stray signals from neighbouring buildings could make him ill.

It has also cost the top DJ thousands of pounds in lost income.

Steve, who had a residency at huge Ibiza club Pacha before his allergy, said: "I've missed out on loads of European DJ gigs as I can't find accommodation without wi-fi. Most hotels have it, as have all the airports. I can't even catch a train because they have it."

Steve is safe in his current home, a detached house in a village near Falmouth, Cornwall, as it is isolated and has 18in-thick granite walls.

But since he and girlfriend Linda decided to move, it has been hard to find anywhere remote enough to avoid signals.

Steve said: "I can't live within 50 yards of anyone. I wouldn't be able to stand it feeling ill in my own house.

"There's no medication you can take."

Steve - better known to clubbing fans as Afterlife - now carries a wi-fi detector with him wherever he goes so he can avoid problem areas.

Steve only realised he suffered from the condition two years ago after turning up at a mate's studio that had recently installed wi-fi.

He and his pal were both feeling ill with headaches and dizziness and struggling to concentrate so they turned off the machine to see if they felt better... and they did.

Steve said: "Some of my friends, or members of their family, are equally affected by wi-fi but are only just starting to notice as its use spreads.

Headaches

"Even now there's very little education about it."

There is no hard evidence that wi-fi is dangerous to your health.

But just three months ago teachers called for it to be banned in schools over health fears, and for a Government investigation into the biological and thermal effects.

A couple of years ago the German government even urged people to avoid wi-fi in favour of "conventional wired connections". Steve believes the issue needs looking into and that many people are suffering from his condition without realising.
He added: "I certainly believe most of the headaches people get at work are caused by it.

"I've spoken to friends who work in offices who have ended up living on painkillers because of their daily headaches. They tried turning off their transmitters and found their headaches stopped.

"There's a lot of anecdotal evidence that the radiation has made people feel ratty and tired, caused disrupted sleep, rows and even the break-up of relationships.
"I'd advise people to turn off their wi-fi at home and see if it changes the way they feel. They just might get a surprise."

Tuesday, June 23, 2009

退后原來是向前

article in http://teongee.blogspot.com
2009年6月17日


上周提到武吉安滿村三埃采金的爭論。既得利益集團、受影響村民和立法者的糾纏。當問題得用科學的根據來下定論時,問題便產生了。那是因為科學有它的盲點、有它的不足。既得利益集團常常以一句“沒有具體的科學根據”,四兩撥千斤的擺脫受影響的百姓的哭訴。

這便是一個名副其實的濫用科學之名來達到私利的典型例子。進一步的思考“沒有具體的科學根據來證明有危害”這句話的同時,也意味著“沒有具體的科學根據來證明絕對安全”。在還存著爭論的事件上,人民的利益,尤其是健康,應該是不能被妥協或輕視的。

科學根據真的那樣的難以得到嗎?學醫和學科學的都懂,科學的研究是需要時間、經費和人力資源的。科學研究的結果不是賭場里的開盤,非大則是小(不是黑便是白),常常里頭便硬是有個灰色地帶。科學研究更不是煮快熟麵。涉及的研究范疇包括了在子宮內(in utero)、在活體內(in vivo)、在體外(in vitro)和流行病學(epidemiology)。

一位在國外生活的網友對我說,在西方國家,沒有明言可以碰的工業,你最好別碰。不然會被環保團體、衛權份子,搞到你傾家蕩產。而在發展中國家,沒說不可以做的,你就可以放手一搏。搭通天地線,自有護航者為你開路。在發展中國家,主流思想是“發展是硬道理”。誰反對發展,誰便是阻止國家進步繁榮,誰便是斷人衣食。因為這樣的刻板思維,很多時候我們的基本權益便被擱置在一旁。

因為三埃采金事件的爭論,我想到一群默默的在面對著電磁波輻(electromagnetic fields)的危害而做出努力的非政府組織的成員。這個名為“電磁波輻射醒覺運動”的組織自動自發的給人民提供有關電磁波輻射危害的訊息和如何的減低有關輻射對人體所帶來的負面影響。

對于這個手提電話、電訊塔、家用無線電話和無線上網(WiFi)所涉及的電磁波輻射,幾乎所有的使用者都不認為它會對人體帶來危害。一部份的人認為,若是有危害的話,政府或是業者一定把它給禁了。再說,似乎從來沒有媒體真正的傳達過有關電磁波輻射危害的訊息。因為大多數人的主觀成見和不積極探索新知識,很多時候大多數人,尤其是知識份子,常常妄下定論。

我從這個組織的負責人拿來一大疊的資料。接觸了幾位國際上研究電磁波輻射的學者和專家、翻閱了許多的研究報告、接觸了受電磁波輻射影響的電磁波敏感群,才驚覺這個我每天都在接觸和使用的科技,我對它的認識是這么的有限。尤其是防范和安全措施的知識,近乎等于零。

今天幾乎所有城鎮的每個角落,電訊塔林立。仿佛一百巴仙的無線電話的涵蓋率便是一項成就、便是步向先進國的象征。政府都很寬容業者,總是讓業者在低障礙下設立它們的電訊塔。如今政府打著縮短城市和鄉鎮數碼知識的鴻溝,大力推廣和落實全州無線上網。今天我們居住的四周布滿著了其實可以用有線電話和有線上網來減少的電磁波輻射。

我一直在強調,孩童生活和學習的地方,尤其是學校、圖書館、病老者養病的地方、我們休閑和運動的公園與忙碌了一整天後歇息的住家,其實不需要也不適合被這個電磁波輻射每天24小時的籠罩著。

當西方國家漸漸的將電訊塔和無線上網發射器搬離學校和密集的住宅區時,我們卻打著朝向先進之名將全州給籠罩在電磁波輻射底下。我想到這首禪詩:手把青秧插野田,低頭方見水中天,六根俱靜方為道,退后原來是向前!

Wednesday, May 20, 2009

School Wi-Fi Campaign:Hérouville-Saint-Clair freed from wi-fi microwave radiation at 2450 MHz

A Council technician takes away the first wi-fi antenna




The first wi-fi antenna removed is handed over symbolically to the mayor Rodolphe Thomas


29 04 2009:
The mayor of the second largest city in Calvados
is removing the wi-fi network from local schools.

School Wi-Fi Campaign:Removal of all the wi-fi antennas
Replacement with Exthernet wired connections

Hérouville-Saint-Clair freed from wi-fi microwave radiation at 2450 MHz


Furthers link http://www.next-up.org/France/Calvados.php#1

Friday, May 8, 2009

Holland: Doctors issue an appeal against radiation risks



Article in next-up.org

Holland:
Doctors issue an appeal against radiation risks:
"Reduce exposure to ElectroMagnetic Fields"


On 8 April 2009, 50 doctors presented an appeal to Dutch political
leaders and government health authorities at The Hague.

On the basis of their experience and observations, they call for
measures to be taken to minimise exposure to artificial radiation from
electromagnetic fields.

The signatories note a general increase in serious medical conditions
of unidentified origin. This increase in health problems and illness
parallels the explosive increase in exposure to radiation from
electromagnetic fields in the environment.

This appeal is a request to reduce exposure to these artificial fields
and a plea for a more careful use of electrical and wireless
technologies. In addition it calls for a policy based on independent
research and expert opinions published in international scientific
journals.

The signatories are all doctors, general practitioners, medical
scientists and specialists.

Among them is the general practitioner Dr Liesbeth Adriaansens, who
recounts some of the cases from her practice. More evidence comes
from a patient who describes the symptoms they have suffered as a
result of exposure to electromagnetic fields.

The symptoms that patients and scientists ascribe to low and high
frequency electromagnetic fields include palpitations, problems with
concentration and memory, headaches, fatigue, stress, sleep
disturbances and so on. These sometimes improve with simple
measures such as replacing a cordless DECT telephone by one with
a wired connection. Some scientists link electromagnetic exposure to
a risk of Alzheimer's disease and cancer. The commonest sources of
electromagnetic fields are relay antennas, wi-fi, cordless phones,
electric wires, etc.


Given that there is still no adequate information on the health hazards
of EMFs available to the public, in spite of the mounting accumulation
of scientific proof, the Dutch organisations the National Platform on
Radiation Risks, the Foundation for the Electro-hypersensitive and
the Report on Environmental Health and Telephones for Children
have decided to publish in the near future an information booklet on
'Using a mobile phone safely'.

For more information:
Alex Swinkels – Dutch National Platform Radiation Risks
T. : +31-181-785587, .
info@stralingsrisicos.nl, www.stralingsrisicos.nl

Dr. J-P. Mossink and Dr. Liesbeth
Adriaansens during the presentation of
the Appeal to the media.

Wednesday, May 6, 2009

The mayor of the second largest city in Calvados is going to remove the wi-fi network from local schools.



Article in
www.next-up.org

27 April 2009

The mayor of the second largest city in Calvados is
going to remove the wi-fi network from local schools.


HEROUVILLE-SAINT-CLAIR (AFP) — The town council of Hérouville-Saint-Clair (Calvados-Normandy) is going to remove the wi-fi network (wireless Internet) in its schools before the end of the year, it announced on Monday, four days after the launch of the "Radiation Round Table" in Paris.


"We are going to apply the precautionary principle. Our
job is to protect people's health," declared the mayor
Rodolphe Thomas during a press conference.

In this new town of 24,000 inhabitants situated on the
outskirts of Caen, the wi-fi network has provided local
schools with a wireless connection to the Internet, via the
town hall. The dozen sites concerned will now have
independent Internet access.

In addition the Council are going to finance ten or more
measurements of electromagnetic fields in the town, at a
total cost of 4-5000 euros, added Laurent Mata, chief
deputy mayor in charge of sustainable development.

The intention is to change or relocate certain antennas if
the radiation is too intense. "We'll take them to court" if the
phone companies refuse to do this, affirmed M. Mata.

The mayor of Hérouville-Saint-Clair, Rodolphe Thomas

In September Hérouville Saint-Clair is going to launch a
campaign about the precautions to take to protect oneself
from radiation, aimed at the general public, the telecom
operators and the landlords "who receive 1500-2500
euros per month for the rent of the roof where the relay
antenna is installed", according to M. Mata. He estimates
that overall these plans will cost the town 15,000 euros.

Criirem (Centre for research and independent information
on electromagnetic radiation), which claims to be the only
independent organisation taking measurements of
electromagnetic fields, has indicated that about 20 town
and city councils in France have asked them to carry out
assessments of this kind.

A relay antenna installed on the roof of an apartment
building in Hérouville-Saint-Clair (Calvados) 27 04 2009


click

Saturday, April 25, 2009

Untested technology


Article in http://www.wiredchild.org

Untested technology

Cordless phones, Wi-fi, digital baby monitors and other wireless products have become ubiquitous. While their health effects are largely untested, there have been numerous studies of the effects of the electro-magnetic radiation emitted from these devices. All scientists agree that this radiation is dangerous at high levels but it is hoped that the low levels emitted from these household devices are safe. We are not convinced.

Radiation 24/7

The levels of radiation emitted from mobile and cordless phones on standby, and of wi-fi routers, digital baby monitors and bluetooth are a fraction of those of a mobile or cordless phone in use on a call. But this does not mean they are safer.

The radiation exposure from wireless products is a "chronic" exposure, constantly at a low level rather than short bursts of high power. There is evidence that this type of exposure might be more damaging in the long-term. It is thought that when the body first experiences a new source of radiation, it reacts by strengthening its immune defences, but then the immune system begins to weaken progressively as the radiation exposure continues. Read more at http://www.wiredchild.org/sciencealias/43-what-the-science-tells-us/69-health-effects-.html

There is evidence that long-term chronic exposure to electro-magnetic radiation has a range of health effects. We also know that children are more vulnerable than adults.

The German and French governments have advised against the use of wireless products like wi-fi and cordless (DECT) phones at home. Read more at http://www.wiredchild.org/government-alias.html#Germany

A phone mast in your home?

The clearest evidence that this day-in-day-out low-level exposure might be dangerous is from the studies of the health effects of mobile phone masts. Two studies have shown significantly increased levels of cancers amongst those living within a few hundred meters of a mobile phone mast. Other studies have demonstrated a host of other symptoms linked with exposure to mobile phone mast radiation.  One study has shown directly that wi-fi can affect children's cognitive skills like memory, attention and reaction time.

The radiation exposure from a wi-fi router at 5 meters' distance, a cordless DECT phone base unit at 3 meters' distance, or digital baby monitor at less than 1 meter are all experienced at roughly the same level as a mobile phone mast only 150 meters away. If any of these are closer, for example if you sleep with a cordless phone next to the bed, it is equivalent in radiation terms to being only about 50 meters away from a mast. Read more at http://www.wiredchild.org/parents/58-which-products-are-most-dangerous.html

There is now much annecdotal evidence of people experiencing symptoms in the short term, like headaches, nausea, dizziness and loss of concentration. Read more... For this reason, some government and public bodies have stopped the introduction of wi-fi in some public places and schools.

Read more about the health effects of cordless (DECT) phones at http://www.emfacts.com/papers/dect.pdf...

Wifi may be more damaging to some people than mobile phones...

Cumulative exposure

Even if the power level of one wireless router or computer is small, a child's environment may include many of these devices at once. Radiation exposure from a wi-fi system comes from the router and each of the computers. A cordless DECT phone emits radiation from the base stations and the handsets. A mobile phone on standby, or worse on a call, also adds to the radiation "load". 

At school, a set of wirelessly connected computers in a classroom is known to result in exposures much higher than one computer being used alone. The radiiation level has been found to be equivalent to being in the main beam of a mobile phone mast (which official guidelines state should not fall on school grounds without the consent of parents and the school). In 2007 a BBC Panorama programme found that the readings next to a classroom laptop showed radiation at double the level experienced only 100 metres from a mobile phone mast. This exposure from wi-fi is additional to mobile phones, cordless DECT phones and bluetooth used around the children in schools.

So at any one time a child may be exposed to cumulative levels of radiation much higher than each product emits alone. They may be exposed constantly at school and at home, even when asleep.

Formative exposure

This exposure generally starts young and continues throughout children's lives. Children are now being exposed to wireless products from a very early age and often throughout their developing childhood and teenage years. This is experimental - no-one has any idea of the cumulative effect of such long-term exposure starting at such a formative age.

We know from the scientific studies relating to mobile phones that children are more vulnerable to this type of radiation, absorbing more radiation than adults through their thinner skulls. Given the many studies that show this radiation could be very dangerous, do we not have a duty to protect children from the possibly serious future health effects of this exposure?

Read about the dangers of mobile phones at http://www.wiredchild.org/sciencealias/43-what-the-science-tells-us/66--what-the-science-tells-us-mobile-phones.html

Read more about children's greater vulnerability at http://www.wiredchild.org/sciencealias/43-what-the-science-tells-us/66--what-the-science-tells-us-mobile-phones.html#children

Read more about this global experiment at http://www.wiredchild.org/sciencealias/43-what-the-science-tells-us/59-children-as-guinea-pigs.html

Re: Free wireless Internet plan remains in limbo

Letter by Carl Katz to the Editor in Vancouver Courier on Wi-Fi Projects

To the Editor:
Re: Free wireless Internet plan remains in limbo, April 10

I am astounded that our city councilors are still trying to find a way
to roll out Wi-Fi in pubic buildings without considering the emerging
body of science that is saying that Wi-Fi represents a considerable
health risk.

I have heard those in favour of pubic Wi-Fi cite the World Health
Organization (WHO) and Health Canada (who bases their radiation safety
guidelines on the WHO’s guidelines) and as two public bodies that say
Wi-Fi is safe and falls within their safety guidelines. In reality, Wi-
Fi does fall within these guidelines, however there are the following
important points to consider:

Health Canada’s Safety Code Six is based on thermal guidelines. It
allows human tissue to increase in temperature by one degree Celsius
over a six minute period when exposed to microwave radiation. All the
deleterious health effects from microwave radiation that are
documented in current peer reviewed research occur at levels thousands
of times lower than Safety Code Six. Some of these health effects
include headaches, dizziness, cognitive difficulties, sleep
disturbances and unexplained anxiety. At a biological level, leakage
in the blood-brain barrier, DNA breakage, and disruption in
intracellular communication have all been documented.
If you watch the BBC Panorama episode “Wi-Fi: A Warning Signal” at
mastsanity.org, you will hear Sir William Stewart, U.K.'s top
scientist and former science adviser to Margaret Thatcher and Tony
Blair saying the WHO is wrong about safe levels of non-ionizing
radiation and that the whole basis of their safety limits are
inadequate to protect the population, especially our children.

Ditto for the German government, who in 2007 warned all citizens not
to use Wi-Fi. Then there are Doctors Gerd Oberfeld and Henry Lai, who
are world renowned for their research into electromagnetic radiation
and biological effects - they both said they would pull their children
out of any school that had Wi-Fi. Professor Olle Johansson of the
world renowned Karolinska institute in Sweden, has found biological
effects at radiation levels lower than those associated with Wi-Fi.
In 2002, following research on wireless radiation in the ‘90’s, the
global insurance industry pulled liability coverage for the health
effects from wireless technology. Given that insurance companies
quantify risks and then associate a dollar value on that risk, this
represents a huge liability issue for cities, school boards and anyone
who rolls out wireless technologies – they are virtually uninsured.

Last December, in an effort to improve traffic flow for buses by
wirelessly controlling traffic signals, Translink rolled out a Wi-Fi
network along Main Street from 57th Avenue all the way downtown, with
no public consultation or transparency. This Wi-Fi network subjects
all residents and businesses along Main street to radiation without
their awareness or consent. Now there is serious talk of putting Wi-Fi
into all community centres in Vancouver, which will expose our
children, the employees and the general public - all the while schools
all over Europe are pulling out Wi-Fi based on the aforementioned
warnings. Lakehead university in Thunder Bay has held off on
implementing campus-wide Wi-Fi for the same reasons.

City council and the city of Vancouver must take a step back and look
at independent the body of research that is clearly saying we may have
a huge public health problem in the future. For the sake of our
children and all our citizens, the City of Vancouver must apply the
Precautionary Principle, and hold off on implementing this technology.
Anything less would be irresponsible.


Carl Katz
Vancouver

Thursday, April 23, 2009

電磁波敏感症-生理傷害

文取自:台灣電磁輻射公害防治協會

電磁波過敏症問卷

Posted: 22 Apr 2009 07:55 PM PDT

問卷說明:下面問卷可測試您是否有電磁波敏感症狀,有25題問題,請仔細思考您曾經遭受過這些電磁波過敏症狀,如您有遭受過下列情況症狀,如是—“經常,得2分”, “偶而,得1分”,”不曾,得0分”,把每題得分寫在括號內,統計總分,判定是否有電磁波敏感症狀。

評分標準
( )1.四肢或關節有感到麻木、軟弱或刺痛:經常--(2分), 偶而--(1分) 不曾--(0分)
( )2.不能從日常生活作息去解釋不正常的疲憊或軟弱:經常--(2分), 偶而--(1分) 不曾--(0分)
( )3.依據您個人的位置,會影響日常生活的思緒或不能專心:經常--(2分),偶而--(1分) 不曾--(0分)
( )4.會癢、痛、抽稸或肩膀、手臂、腿、腳、腳踝、手肘、骨盆、等關節附近的肌肉痙孿:經常--(2分),偶而--(1分) 不曾--(0分)
( )5.頭痛:經常--(2分), 偶而--(1分) 不曾--(0分)
( )6.緊張:經常--(2分), 偶而--(1分) 不曾--(0分)
( )7.不安定性,焦慮:經常--(2分), 偶而--(1分) 不曾--(0分)
( )8.喪失記憶:經常--(2分), 偶而--(1分) 不曾--(0分)
( )9.睡眠干擾,失眠:經常--(2分), 偶而--(1分) 不曾--(0分)
( )10.微弱,暈眩,震顫:經常--(2分), 偶而--(1分) 不曾--(0分)
( )11.會有皮膚紅腫、癢、起疹子 、痛或皮膚乾燥:經常--(2分), 偶而--(1分) 不曾--(0分)
( )12.胃腸痛、消化系統問題、腸子不規則蠕動:經常--(2分), 偶而--(1分) 不曾--(0分)
( )13.感覺很熱,會發燒:經常--(2分), 偶而--(1分) 不曾--(0分)
( )14.刺激性感覺,眼睛感覺刺痛有如一沙子飛入眼中。視野模糊或眼前看東西會閃爍:
經常--(2分), 偶而--(1分) 不曾--(0分)
( )15.流鼻血或血壓改變:經常--(2分), 偶而--(1分) 不曾--(0分)
( )16.心律不整、心悸或胸口痛:經常--(2分), 偶而--(1分) 不曾--(0分)
( )17.牙痛或神經痛:經常--(2分), 偶而--(1分) 不曾--(0分)
( )18.易掉髮:經常--(2分), 偶而--(1分) 不曾--(0分)
( )19.耳鳴 (如 咑咑聲、嗡嗡聲、噓噓聲等聲音)或高頻嗚咽聲:經常--(2分), 偶而--(1分)
不曾--(0分)
( )20.對光會過敏,尤其是螢光燈或電腦螢幕。(有罕見的會對陽光過敏) :經常--(2分), 偶而—(1分) 不曾--(0分)
( )21.會反覆感到焦躁、憤怒、暴力、破壞力及感到敵對:經常--(2分), 偶而--(1分) 不曾--(0分)
( )22.甲狀腺問題:經常--(2分), 偶而--(1分) 不曾--(0分)
( )23.推斷有持續一段急性流行性感冒的感覺:經常--(2分), 偶而--(1分) 不曾--(0分)
( )24.沮喪:經常--(2分), 偶而--(1分) 不曾--(0分)
( )25.漏失時間 (例如不知道自己於的時空) :經常--(2分), 偶而--(1分) 不曾--(0分)

總分:___________ (您的分數高於25,您可能已有電磁波過敏症,如果您的分數介於10 ~15分,您可能是遭受一些程度的電磁波。)

資料來源: http://www.powerwatch.org.uk/

電磁波敏感症

Posted: 22 Apr 2009 07:46 PM PDT

翻譯:鄭美莉

How many people suffer from ElectroSensitivity?
有多少人具有電磁波敏感症

瑞典已將電磁波敏感症正式視為一種生理傷害,該國有超過230,000人(佔總人口2.5%)具有電磁波敏感症。

除了瑞典之外,其他國家沒有正式的數據,如果套用2.5%的比例,則英格蘭的電磁波敏感症的人數可能達到一百五十萬人,美國則有六百五十萬人。

在2002年有兩個電磁波敏感症人口的研究,第一個研究[Hillert等人所作] 利用的是隨機寄發問卷的方式(10600份),結果回信的人有1.5%表示具有電磁波敏感症。第二個研究[Levallois等人所作]利用電話隨機訪問2000人,結果有3.2%表示具有此症,而0.5%表示他們高度敏感。

Is ElectroSensitivity recognized by the medical profession and/or the authorities?
醫界或有關當局是否已承認電磁波敏感症?

世界衛生組織WHO 承認電磁波敏感症是一種確實的病症,有時甚至是一種殘障的情況。然而,大多數的政府並未將此症視為一種殘障。遺憾的是,在政治上體認電磁波具有負面健康危害的程度,就如同將這事實當作是一種尚未全面了解的新情形,這兩種程度一樣的低。

目前瑞典是唯一一個將電磁波敏感症正式視為一種生理殘障的國家。

what other names is it known by?
類似的名詞

Electrical HyperSensitivity(EHS) 電磁波高度敏感---最常用的詞,同於ElectroSensitivity.

VDT Sickness -- 描述一群電磁波敏感症患者,這種患者在電腦螢幕前時,會有灼熱感、刺痛感、疼痛感這些電磁波敏感症狀。

Idiopathic Environmental Intolerance (IEI) -- 這是世界衛生組織在2004年提出的詞,但並未取代常用的詞。

其他的詞

Electromagnetic Sensitivity
Electromagnetic Oversensitivity
Electromagnetic Hypersensitivity
Electrical Sensitivity
Electrical Supersensitivity
Elcetrical Oversensitivity

What can I do to help someone who is affected?
可以為電磁波敏感症患者做什麼?

通常無法尋求正式的幫助或治療,大多數醫生會一笑置之,專家不把這些情形當作一回事,有時甚至朋友或家人會嘲笑這種事,你會覺得非常孤單,但最重要的,當患者說他們對電磁波敏感症的時候,你可以相信他們的話;當患者採取步驟來屏蔽電磁波或避免敏感物時,你可以支持他們的行動。

Have there been any high-profile cases?
有任何備受矚目的案例嗎?

前任挪威總理以及世界衛生組織Director-general Gro Harlem Brundtland 是電磁波敏感症患者,她被選為近二十五年內最有影響力的歐洲人,她名列第四,僅在教宗聖保祿二世、戈巴契夫、柴契爾夫人之後。她對手機和電腦都會敏感。她本身是位合格的內科醫師。

她說 “一開始我感到耳朵附近有溫熱感,之後痛苦加重,轉成強烈的不適與頭痛,只要使用手機就會發生.... 不是只有對聲音有反應,而是對電磁波有反應。我的高度敏感症嚴重到只要離手機不到四公尺就會有反應。”

她接著談到嚴重性”我相信這情形應該認真看待。有些人變得對手機或電腦所發出的電磁波敏感,究竟這樣的敏感性會不會導致健康的負面影響,例如癌症或是其他疾病?我們還不知道!但我認為我們應該遵循預警原則,特別是在牽涉我們的子女的時候。”

1998年,易利信的一家子公司裡,發現在公司屋頂架設手機基地台之後,有60名員工出現電磁波高度敏感症。公司因此試著保密,然而該公司收到一筆來自瑞典基金會的資金,要利用這筆資金 ($1,000,000) 來改善工作環境。現在那些員工中還是有許多人仍然患有敏感症。

Who was the first person to suffer from Electrosensitivity?
誰是第一個患有電磁波敏感症的人?

一般相信,第一名電磁波敏感症患者是 Nikola Tesla 特斯拉,他是發明家,物理學家以及機械工程師,被譽為天才,公認為最偉大的工程科技科學家之一,在他的晚年,他患有嚴重的症狀,這些症狀被認為是因為他一生接觸了高劑量的電磁場所導致的。

特斯拉的傳記曾獲普立茲獎,作者是特斯拉的好友 John O’neill,書中描述:
“有名望的內科醫生表明--醫學幫不了他,其中一種症狀就是他敏銳的感官,一直以來他的感覺就很敏銳,但後來敏銳的程度變得很誇張,效果如同是一種折磨,三間房間之外,一只手錶的指針移動聲,對他而言,就好像鐵鎚敲打在鐵鉆上一樣;車輛經過的震動,透過椅子的傳遞,會讓他的身體感到鼕鼕地震動,因此他需要在床的四根柱子上加裝橡膠墊來消除震動,普通的說話聲在他聽來如同打雷;輕輕的碰觸所造成的生理影響就和拳擊一樣,日光照射在他身上就好像他的身上發生爆炸;即使在黑暗中看不到數呎外的物體,他也能感覺到物體的存在,憑藉的是他前額麻麻的感覺。他全身時常遭受痙癵發抖的折磨;他說,他的脈搏有時每分鐘只微弱跳動幾下,有時每分鐘超過150下,由於這些莫名的症狀使得他極力想要恢復正常。”

在 Electromagnetic Man 這本書中補充提到:
“這麼一位號稱是電機工程之父的人身上,他勢必接收了相當劑量的長期電磁波照射,以他在工作中沉迷於電機工程的程度而言,他是第一個電磁波敏感症的最佳候選人。”

特斯拉逝世於1946年,享年87歲。

Does sensitivity mean allergy?
敏感症就是過敏症嗎?

大多數的情形,答案是否定的,過敏指的是免疫系統對於外侵物的特殊免疫反應,包括抗體。電磁波敏感症的機制還不確定,但是通常與抗體無關。

然而在描述電磁波敏感症時,過敏這個詞有助於理解。

Why is it sometimes difficult for ElectroSensitive’s to work out what they are reacting to?
有時為何難以判斷出電磁波敏感症的反應來源?

很多情況下,當人們找出敏感或過敏物質(例如化學物質或金屬物質)時,往往是經過一系列錯誤嘗試才找出來的。

例如,假設一個人出現蕁麻疹,他們如何得知起因呢? 可能是他們開始對金屬材質的珠寶或新的噴劑起反應,有可能是他們的工作場所開始使用新的清潔化學品,而他們對那種化學品起反應,可能是食物引起的,可能是他們新使用的洗髮精,可能是油漆或地毯釋放出來的化學物質--可能性有無限多種,要找出過敏原可能要花費數月甚至更長的時間。

通常,電磁波敏感症的敏感來源很明顯,然而,高度敏感症患者有時對許多其他事物都會起反應,這種情形下就不容易找出來源,也就要花許多時間才找得出來。此外,

. 有時電磁波敏感性也對一系列的化學品有敏感性,化學品引發的敏感反應和電 所引發的敏感反應一樣。

. 如果對多重事物都會起敏感反應,多重敏感物所引發的反應會比單一敏感物嚴 重。
. 反應可能會延遲一兩天才會發生。

(資料來源:http://www.electrosensitivity.org/qa.htm)

Thursday, April 2, 2009

槟州电磁辐射公害防护联盟等拜会槟州民主行动党主席曹观友行政议员等



槟州电磁辐射公害防护联盟及居民代表一行人拜会槟州行动党主席曹观友(前排右三);左起詹义华、陈瀚威市议员、郭庭恺州议员。

(槟城2日讯)槟州电磁辐射公害防护联盟于日前联同州内多个受电讯塔影响的各区居民代表礼貌拜会槟州民主行动党主席曹观友行政议员,针对州内电讯塔及槟州政府推行中的“全槟无线”计划提呈备忘录及提出建议。

槟州电磁辐射公害防护联盟成员包括发言人温秀枝医疗师、顾问陈奕权医师、顾问林怡保医生、顾问涂仲仪医生、成员王美丽、成员李斯杰、成员蔡昌卫,成员李翠华(丹绒武雅);各地区代表包括来自大山脚的詹义华、日落洞柴埕居协主席李健义及居民、垄尾家乐阁居协主席王海清及居民、亚依淡居民代表张女士、比南利区居民代表雷翠梅。

陪同曹观友出席会者尚包括槟州行动党秘书郭庭恺硕士州议员、财政陈瀚威会计师市议员及曹观友助理。

一行13人在早上11时向也是槟州地方政府委员会主席的曹观友报告了对电讯塔及槟州政府推行中的全槟无线计划潜在的电磁辐射对健康带来的隐忧提呈备忘录;会上也提出优先解决面对电讯塔困扰的受影响地区。对话会在融洽气氛下进行及完成,会上也要求在一个月后能重回桌上针对同样问题再次进行探讨。

Tuesday, February 24, 2009

Wi-fi and Wi-max - Why You Shouldn’t Use Them



The hot new craze in Internet access is Wi-Fi and its soon-to-be big brother Wi-Max. Wi-Fi is a wireless connection that allows users to access the Internet without the computer being connected to a cable. And yes, it’s very convenient. Imagine walking from the sofa to the bedroom with your laptop and never loosing your connection. Imagine the freedom and flexibility afforded schools and office workers. No more ugly bothersome cables to tie you down. You’re free to roam the Internet with your fingers while roaming your home, school or office with your feet. Freedom to move and freedom to surf. Perfect for the individual who is on the go and up to date with the latest technology. You can even have free Internet access at your local coffee shop. Same for airports. What a great idea. Or is it?

What exactly is Wi-Fi? Wi-Fi is a common term that stands for ‘wireless fidelity.’ It simply means that a computer can access the Internet without wires or cables. In other words, it allows one to have a wireless connection to the Internet. It’s like taking a cell phone base station and placing it in your home, schoolroom or office area. Wi-Fi is basically the same type of connection as used to operate a cell phone. It’s a product of convenience as it allows one to access the Internet with a desktop or laptop computer without the need for connecting cables. Moving from room to room with a laptop computer and no cables is a nice convenience although it certainly isn’t a necessity.

How does Wi-Fi work? Wi-Fi is really very similar to your cell phone. Radio signals are transmitted from the computer or Bluetooth device to a wireless router, sometimes called a wireless access point (WAP) or wireless local area network (WLAN). The router then sends the signal to the Internet through a cable modem. So this router or wireless access point is really the device responsible for transmitting the harmful radio waves. Any number of computers or devices can be configured to connect to one wireless router to make Internet connections. The workable distance is about a range of 300 feet or more from the wireless access point while most distances for good connections are maintained at about 100 feet. And, of course there are many variables that can affect this connection. Laptop computers and Personal Digital Assistants (PDAs) are the most common devices utilizing Wi-Fi technology.

Wi-Fi Emits Radio Frequencies Wireless connections emit radio frequency signals, or radiation, just like cell phones, cell phone towers and other wireless devices. Wi-Fi usually transmits its signal at frequencies in the range of 2.4GHz to 5 GHz. Cordless phones often transmit in the 2.4GHz to 5 GHz range, too, and this often causes the cordless phone to interfere with a wireless internet connection to a nearby computer. The Wi-Fi frequency is considerably higher than the frequencies used for cell phones which operate in the 850 MHz to1900 MHz range. This higher frequency allows more data to be carried. However, as we’ll see later, it is not the frequency of the signal that does the damage to our health. So the higher Wi-Fi frequency isn’t really the issue at all when it comes to health considerations.

Wi-Fi Hotspots Now In Schools Wi-Fi has become popular in the home, office, the airport and coffee shops. Many cities are now installing “hot spots” where one can take a laptop computer and freely access the Internet over the provided network. This is what is known as a “hot spot.” It’s a place to make a wireless connection to the Internet. And they are springing up everywhere. Entire cities are becoming wireless allowing one to connect to the Internet from anywhere in the city. And due to the ease of convenience Wi-Fi connections in schools are now becoming quite popular, too. No longer are computers hard-wired to a connection in a classroom. Connections are now virtual and allow the user, student or teacher, the freedom to connect anywhere in the school without the burden of being restricted by cable connections.

Why Wireless Connections Are Harmful There are two potentially harmful mechanisms in which Wi-Fi users, including school children, may be harmed. The first mechanism involves the exposure to radiation from the distance or proximity of the user to the computer monitor. This form of exposure originates from the electromagnetic field being given off by the monitor itself and has nothing to do with the wireless connection. Electromagnetic radiation is given off by the computer screen regardless of whether the connection is wired or wireless. Any and all computer screens produce electromagnetic radiation. These electromagnetic fields can be substantial in strength and can reach levels much higher than the 1 milligauss (1 mG) threshold level of exposure recommended by experts as being safe. Such a field can easily be measured with an inexpensive instrument called a gauss meter.

The second mechanism of harm comes from the radiation or radio wave itself. The wireless signal, oscillating at 2.4 to 5 GHz, moves much too fast for the body to recognize. So this wave isn’t doing the damage. However, anytime any data or information is transmitted, say through our voice, through text messages or through the sending of information, the data is packaged and “piggy-backed” onto the first wave. This creates a second carrier wave and this wave is called the information-carrying radio wave, or ICRW. It is the information-carrying radio wave that is producing the harm. Here’s how this happens. This second carrier wave, or ICRW, oscillates in a much lower Hertz (Hz) range that is easily recognized by the body. When the ICRW comes in contact with the body the body recognizes this wave and responds to it as if this carrier wave were some type of foreign invader. When this happens certain physiologic changes occur which are very significant. First, at the cellular level, the cell membrane becomes hard and inflexible. This occurs because the active transport channels shut down as the cell goes into a protection mode. This hardening effect of the cell membrane also causes the cell to lose its permeability, meaning needed nutrients can’t get inside the cell where they are needed. In other words, the cell doesn’t get nourished.

Conversely, since the cell membrane is hardened and less permeable, the toxins and free radicals that build up inside the cell, as a natural part of our daily metabolism, can’t get out. The buildup of toxins and free radicals inside the cell causes other problems. These toxic products damage the mitochondria in the cell. If you’ll remember from biology class the mitochondria are where energy for the body is produced. When this energy-producing process is damaged the cell begins to lose its ability to function.

In addition, cells lose their ability to communicate with one another. When one cell can’t communicate with another cell and messages don’t get sent or received the body can’t respond properly to any type of stress, injury, or invasion. Furthermore, the DNA inside the cell becomes damaged. Fragments of DNA break off and form something called micronuclei. Micronuclei are precursors to cancer formation. And when enough energy is lost and when enough malnourishment occurs the cell eventually becomes dysfunctional and dies. When enough cells die the tissues are affected. When enough tissue is affected organs become damaged and don’t work properly. And the cascade of damaging events begin that can lead to a multitude of symptoms and failure of the body’s defense mechanisms to act appropriately.

The Wi-Fi Problem Think of Wi-Fi this way. It’s really nothing more than a small version of a cell phone tower placed in the classroom or office. Or, it could be similar to having a cordless phone in your home with multiple handsets throughout the house. The base station is the access point and all the peripheral phones connect with it wirelessly. The radio frequency radiation being emitted is the same. The information-carrying radio wave is being transmitted continuously 24 hours a day. The connections from the computers and other wireless devices throughout the school, office or home to the wireless access points cause any user around them, (children, teacher, staff, etc.) to be continuously exposed. Everyone in the building is caught in the crossfire of the continual access to the wireless access points. Even non-users are exposed because of the blanketing effect of these wireless access points throughout the building. So no one escapes the exposure.

In understanding the danger of Wi-Fi we must remember that it is not the type of device, in this case a wireless access point or router that is important. Rather it is the type of radio frequency radio waves that are being produced by the device that are significant. Whether from a wireless router, a cell phone, a cell phone tower, or personal digital assistant (PDA), electromagnetic frequencies are produced by all these devices. We must look at the technology being used by these devices and not the device itself as the problem. This should be the primary concern as we evaluate their safety, particularly in the classroom.

Another important aspect of Wi-Fi exposure is that of modulation. Modulation refers to whether or not the signal frequency is constant or pulsed. The new digital cell phones operate on a pulsed frequency, as does all wireless technology. Studies have shown that these pulsed signals are a greater risk than analog, non-pulsed signals. 1

Certainly, by the addition of any type of wireless we are adding to the burden of electropollution we are all currently exposed to. Special consideration should be given to the additional exposure that Wi-Fi technology would bring to those in a classroom, including the instructors, teachers, staff and certainly students.

Children Are More Vulnerable Concern about the increased vulnerability to electropollution by children has valid reasoning. Since the skull bones of the head don’t fully harden until about age 22 the skull bones of a child’s head are softer than that of an adult. A softer head bone translates to easier penetration through the skull and into the head by radio frequency radiation. Furthermore, the head of a child contains more water since the brain is not fully developed. It would make sense then that water will act as a conductor to electromagnetic radiation increasing the possibility of even further damage. And since a child’s brain and nervous system is still developing it only stands to reason that the potential damage would be greater since cells that are in a growing phase are more easily damaged.

And finally, exposing children in the elementary schoolroom will add to both the amount of electromagnetic radiation exposure and the accumulated length of exposure over their lifetime that they will be exposed. No one can argue that the children of today’s generation will be exposed to far greater amounts of electromagnetic radiation and will be exposed to it for a much longer period of time than any generation before. We simply don’t know the consequences of this increased and cumulative exposure. And it’s an experiment that we shouldn’t place our children in. Why set up these networks without understanding any of the long-term consequences? Did we not learn a lesson from the tobacco and asbestos industries?

Effects of WirelessRadio Frequency Radiation Although no studies have been done on Wi-Fi per se there is a generous amount of research that has been carried out on cell phones, cell phone towers and masts. Since the Wi-Fi signal is the same type of radiation (only the frequency is different) one can assume with reasonable assurance that the effects of exposure to Wi-Fi will follow the same pattern of exposure to cell phones and cell phone towers.

Here’s an example of what can happen. Let’s say one works in a schoolroom or office where wireless access, or Wi-Fi, is used. In other words, we are continually exposed to a constant bombardment of electromagnetic radiation waves. Over time, sitting or working in this classroom or office, the cells of the body gradually loose their energy and consequently their ability to communicate. What if the function of a particular group of cells was to maintain the integrity of the blood-brain barrier? The blood-brain barrier is an intricate membrane that keeps harmful substances and toxins from contacting sensitive brain tissue. But what if the cells of the blood-brain barrier can’t communicate or don’t work any longer? The barrier would break down and this would allow harmful substances to enter. Those substances would then come in contact with sensitive brain cells. The result would be injured and damaged brain cells. This is just one example of how a particular group of cells can be adversely affected by electromagnetic radiation. In fact, studies have shown that placing a call on cell phone for just two minutes can disable the blood-brain barrier. 2 The same case could be made for the immune system and any other major “system” of the body since different cellular groups perform different functions to keep us healthy.

There are more than a dozen studies linking an increased risk for brain cancer and acoustic neuroma (tumor of the auditory nerve) to radio frequency radiation from cell phones and cordless phones. 3

Even the World Health Organization (WHO) is concerned about the effects of radiofrequency radiation on children’s health. In a recent WHO publication they wrote:

“The possible adverse health effects in children associated with radiofrequency fields have not been fully investigated.”

“Because there are suggestions that RF(radio frequency) exposure may be more hazardous for the fetus and child due to their greater susceptibility, prudent avoidance is one approach to keeping children’s exposure as low as possible.”

“Further research is needed to clarify the potential risks of ELF-EMF and radiofrequency fields for children’s health.”

Neurobehavioral effects of inhabitants living near a cell phone tower base station have also been studied. The following neuropsychiatric complaints were reported: headache (23.5%), memory changes (28.2%), dizziness (18.8%), tremors (9.4%), depressive symptoms (21.7%), and sleep disturbances (23.5%). 4 In addition, tests of attention and short-term auditory memory were significantly lower in the exposed participants than in control groups.

Obviously, people living close to cell phone towers have an increased risk for developing neurobehavioral problems.

Will We Medicate Our Children Unnecessarily? If indeed neurobehavioral symptoms are produced by radio frequency radiation and these frequencies are continually emitted throughout our schools what might this suggest about the abnormal behavior of students in the classroom? Might parents be inclined and persuaded to medicate their children so that these undesirable symptoms can be controlled? If so, how many of these children would be medicated unnecessarily? Studies now show that the frequencies such as that emitted by cell phones cause abnormal brain hyperactivity. Such artificially induced hyperactivity would cause an unnecessary risk and expense to students who would be placed on some form of pharmaceutical intervention to aid in controlling these symptoms. Many of the drugs used in controlling hyperactivity, such as Ritalin, Concerta, and methylphenidate are in the amphetamine-like class of pharmaceuticals. What a tragedy it would be to find out years later that this form of medication was unnecessary and could have been avoided if we would have chosen precaution over convenience.

Learning Issues As discussed earlier, the mechanism of harm caused by electromagnetic frequencies occurs at the cellular level. The eventual outcome of this harm is disruption of cell-to-cell communication. When the disruption of cell communication occurs cells can’t “talk” to each other. When cells can’t communicate cognition is affected, the ability to learn is affected, the ability to retain information is affected, and behavioral problems can occur.

Makes Kids Susceptible To Other Stressors Radiofrequency radiation is also a stressor to the body. The mere fact that the cells of the body react to these frequencies as discussed earlier indicates that they are harmful. When the stress response occurs from exposure to electromagnetic frequencies the body responds by releasing stress proteins, also known as heat shock proteins, to minimize the ensuing damage. The release of heat shock proteins is just one stress response mechanism that has been identified. Other mechanisms include the triggering of adrenal hormones like adrenaline. Continual stress is not healthy as it can eventually fatigue the adrenal gland, suppress the immune system, and lead to fatigue causing difficulty in concentration. Sleep disturbances may also occur.

Immune System Affected Evidence also exists that radio frequencies produced by such devices as cell phones, Wi-Fi, computers, televisions, etc. can trigger skin reactions.5 Microwave frequencies can trigger the release of chemicals from mast cells. Mast cells in the skin will break open and release chemicals that cause the symptoms of allergic skin reactions. 6 One of the chemicals released by mast cells is histamine. Histamine is often responsible for the symptoms of allergies such as runny nose, watery eyes, inflammation and difficulty breathing. Histamine also constricts the airway leading to or worsening the symptoms of asthma. It is of interest to note that the rate of asthma in children has doubled since 1980 and asthma now affects one in 10 children. The cell phone was introduced in1983 and has seen explosive growth in use in the last decade. Could there be a correlation between the rising rates of asthma, an immune system problem, and the escalating use of cell phones and wireless technology? Certainly, one could anticipate that chronic exposure to these radio waves over time can lead to chronic inflammatory responses.

Electromagnetic Radiation Connected To Autism A recent study has now suggested a direct link between autism and electromagnetic radiation. It appears that EMR may accelerate autistic spectrum disorders. 7 It is noteworthy that the increasing rates of autism parallel the growth of the cell phone and wireless industry. This appears to occur as a result of the trapping of heavy metals within the cell and the inability of the body to excrete the toxic metals present that are often introduced into the body through vaccinations. Heavy metals are neurotoxic. When this excretory process is prohibited these heavy metals, such as mercury, lead, beryllium, and aluminum, damage nerve structures and interfere in inter-cellular communication. This leads to neurological problems and conditions like those found in autism spectrum disorders. This particular study has shown that when electromagnetic radiation is largely eliminated the efficiency of heavy metal detoxification and removal was dramatically increased. In other words, the body was able to excrete and eliminate heavy metals when it had not been able to do so previously. This leads to the suggestion that (1) we need to reduce or eliminate electromagnetic radiation from any child’s environment and (2) measures need to be taken to repair the damage that has already been done by electromagnetic radiation. Although this study looked specifically at autism the same case could be made for attention-deficit disorders and related conditions.

Occupational Hazard For Teachers And School Staff Children will attend school in a particular building for a finite number of years and then move on. For a child the length of time spent in a particular building or location is predetermined. Therefore their exposure levels to this form of radiation will probably change. But what about the teachers and staff members who continue to work in the same building for many, many years? For these workers and teachers the exposure in their building from Wi-Fi networks and radio frequency radiation is continual. What are the effects of this exposure after years and years of time? Will teaching in a Wi-Fi enabled school become an occupational hazard like that of an electrician? These are questions that must and should be answered before, rather than after, any installation of radiation-generating equipment is placed in service.

Wi-Fi In European Schools The European Environment Agency is calling for immediate steps to be taken to reduce exposure to Wi-Fi, cell phones and cell phone towers and masts. Recent international scientific reviews have concluded that electromagnetic radiation safety limits are “thousands of times too lenient” and one official British report came to the conclusion that the development of cancer from cell phone use could not be ruled out.

Sir William Stewart, chairman of the Health Protection Agency in the UK, is calling for a formal investigation into the hazards of using wireless networks in schools. He’s asking that students be monitored for health problems from the networks. Joining him in health concerns over Wi-Fi installations in schools, the Professional Association of Teachers are calling for the Secretary of State for Education in the UK to begin an official inquiry into the issue.

Recently, parents of children at an English school have won a major battle in getting a mast tower removed from their school. Parents indicated that both students and staff complained of symptoms such as insomnia, headaches and numbness. It seems 56 percent of children had trouble sleeping, 54 percent developed headaches and migraines, and 46 percent reported dizziness and numbness. 86 percent of staff members had problems sleeping, 59 percent reported headaches, and 95 percent of staff reported fatigue and numbness. Nosebleeds, nausea, and dizziness were also reported. 8

Dr. Gerd Oberfield, head of environmental health and medicine in the province of Salzburg, Austria, calls the installation of Wi-Fi “dangerous.” In fact, the government in Salzburg has been advising schools not to install Wi-Fi for well over a year now and is considering a complete ban on Wi-Fi networks.

Stowe School in Great Britian recently removed its Wi-Fi equipment from its building. One of its schoolmasters who had taught there for 28 years developed headaches and nausea immediately after Wi-Fi was installed.

International Association of Fire Fighters In 2004, the International Association of Fire Fighters (IAFF) voiced its opinion on cell phone towers and antennas by opposing the installation of cell phone antennas on or near fire stations until a credible study can be done to establish their safety. In studying the available science the IAFF found over 49 references that led them to conclude that they should oppose the placement of cell phone antennas on fire stations. Some of the effects that have been documented by fire fighters include slowed reaction times, sleep deprivation, severe headaches, lack of focus, tremors, and vertigo. 9

What About Wi-Max The latest development in the world of digital communication is something called Wi-Max. Wi-Max is intended for use as a network for large metropolitan areas. Where Wi-Fi is limited to a range of about 100-300 feet, Wi-Max can provide broadband wireless access up to 30 miles from fixed base stations and 3-10 miles from mobile base stations. It’s been described as Wi-Fi on steroids. It’s used in much the same way as Wi-Fi and will soon become the standard for Internet access. Imagine the implications. Whole metropolitan cities blanketed with Wi-Max wireless coverage. How convenient and “connected” do we really need to be?

Conclusion We currently have no studies that are specific to Wi-Fi. However, when assessing the safety issue we can and should look at technologies that are similar and relevant to Wi-Fi to draw our conclusions. This would seem appropriate since Wi-Fi operates in the same manner as other more heavily studies similar technology and the basic mechanism of harm from all wireless technology is the same.

There are countless reports and studies raising caution signals about the effects on human health from exposure to cell phone radiation, cell phone towers, Wi-Fi, and wireless technology in general. The fact remains that wireless technology is a potential carcinogen. So was tobacco. So was asbestos. So were X-Rays. Like these other hazards, which were all at one time only “potential carcinogens,” wireless technology needs further study before we decide to randomly subject ourselves and our children to the potential harmful effects it seems to cause. How long will we wait for these studies? Another 20 years or more? How many lives will be adversely affected or lost while we take the wait-and-see approach?

What can you do? Don’t let your children use a cell phone. Don’t live near a cell phone tower. Don’t use wireless Internet connections or cordless phones in your home. Provide good nutrition to your children in the form of lots of fruits and vegetables. Everyone needs lots of antioxidants to protect themselves from the free radicals being produced by these high levels of radiation. Good quality water is a must, too.

Get involved in your child’s school. Get on the school board. Ask questions regarding the use of Wi-Fi in the school. Object to the installation of such equipment if and when the possibility is discussed.

School districts today are under ever-increasing financial pressures. Healthy lease money is being provided by the wireless industry to install cell phone antennas on school buildings. Once again, this is an unneeded and unnecessary exposure risk for our young people. Does the extra income provided by the wireless industry outweigh the potential risk to our children? The studies say no and we as parents and responsible citizens need to convey that message to our school boards and legislators.

Two-time Nobel Prize nominee, Dr. Gerald Hyland, a physicist, had this to say about cell phone towers. “Existing safety guidelines for cell phone towers are completely inadequate. Quite justifiably, the public remains skeptical of attempts by government and industry to reassure them that all is well, particularly given the unethical way in which they often operate symbiotically so as to promote their own vested interests.”

For more information on the health hazards of wireless technology, cell phones, Wi-Fi, etc. visit http://www.CellphoneRadiationAlert.com For an ongoing discussion of the latest information on the health hazards of wireless technology visit http://www.CellphoneRadiationUSA.blogspot.com

References

1. Lai, Henry. Biological Effects of Radiofrequency electromagnetic fields. Encyclopedia of Biomaterials and Biomedical Engineering. G.L. Gowlin and G. Wnek: Taylor and Francis Books, 2005.

2. Persson, Salford, Brun. Blood-brain barrier permeability in rats expose to electromagnetic fields used in wireless communication; Wireless Networks, Vol. 3, Issue 6, Dec. 1997; pg 455-461

3. BioInitiative Report, Aug. 31, 2007

4. Abdel-Rassoul, El-Fateh, Salem, Micheal, Farahat, El-Batanouny, Salem. Neurobehavioral effects among inhabitants around mobile phone base stations, Neurotoxicology, 2006, Aug. 1.

5. BioInitiative Report, Aug. 31, 2007.

6. BioInitiative Report, Aug. 31, 2007.

7. Mariea, Tamara and Carlo, George. Wireless Radiation in the Etiology and Treatment of Autism: Clinical Observations and Mechanisms; Journal of the Australian College of Nutritional and Environmental Medicine, August 2007.

8. Independent.co.uk. Apr 22, 2007

9. International Association of Fire Fighters, Division of Occupational Health, Safety and Medicine. 2005

Lynn Quiring is a Registered Pharmacist, Baord Certified Clinical Nutritionist, and holds a degree in naturopathic medicine. He also holds diplomas in homeopathy and hormone regulation therapy. He is an expert in cell phone radiation and EMFs and their health effects on the body. He has practiced in natural medicine for over 10 years. He currently owns and operates Logical Health LLC. He can be contacted by emailing to lynnquiring@msn.com

Monday, February 16, 2009

Medical Director of Paracelsus Clinic in Lustmühle, convinced‘electromagnetic loads’ lead to cancer



Article in www.next-up.org

http://electromagnetichealth.org/electromagnetic-health-blog/medical-director-of-switzerland/

February 10th, 2009.

Dr. Thomas Rau, Medical Director of the world renowned Paracelsus Clinic in Lustmühle, Switzerland says he is convinced ‘electromagnetic loads’ lead to cancer, concentration problems, ADD, tinnitus, migraines, insomnia, arrhythmia, Parkinson’s and even back pain. At Paracelsus (www.paracelsus.ch), cancer patients are now routinely educated in electromagnetic field remediation strategies and inspectors from the Geopathological Institute of Switzerland are sent to patients’ homes to assess electromagnetic field exposures.

Of note, Dr. Rau says a strategy to consider for those experiencing ‘electrical
sensitivity’ symptoms is to remove the electromagnetic ‘hot spot’ in the
head created by the presence of metal fillings. Concern is thus not only for
the ‘neurotoxic’ aspect of mercury in fillings, an increasingly understood
hazard, but because fillings themselves act as antennas in the presence of
electromagnetic fields from cell phones and cell towers, wi-fi networks,
portable phones, and other sources of radiofrequency radiation.

Rau says the removal of dental fillings can be an important early step in
reducing electrical sensitivity, allowing some people to live in homes they
otherwise could not tolerate.

Cultures have shown beneficial bacteria grows more slowly in the presence
of electromagnetic fields, says Rau, allowing pathological organisms to
dominate. Thus, a strategy with electrically sensitive patients, or with those
Thomas M. Rau, MD, Medical Director of the Paracelsus Clinic facing chronic conditions, is the aggressive supplementation with probiotics and other Biological Medicine approaches to balance intestinal flora. Many people with chronic infections likely linked to EMF exposures, such as Lyme Disease, are symptom- free after an aggressive microorganism rebalancing program.

Electrical sensitivity—originally known as radio wave sickness—is a sometimes debilitating experience created by these and other disregulating effects of electromagnetic fields. Linked to many acute and chronic illness conditions, electrical sensitivity is a serious emerging public health issue globally and a subject in which most doctors have no training.

A Petition to Congress, created by www.ElectromagneticHealth.org is now circulating on the internet, requesting Congress 1) mandate the FCC lower exposure guidelines to reflect the large body of science showing biological effects at exposures much lower than current standards, 2) repeal Section 704 of the Telecommunications Act of 1996, which rescinded state and local governments right to resist towers on health
or environmental grounds, 3) stop the roll out of the Wi-Max network until Congress better understands the potential health consequences, and 4) accommodate citizens unable to function adequately in high EMF environments, including forbidding cell towers on school properties.

Exposing children in schools to radiation, known to impair brain function and learning, Rau describes as “criminal”. He says, “It is unethical to expose children to electromagnetic load in this way. We know that power stations for electromagnetic waves like mobile phones are hurting the brains of children, so to put such stations into schools is really…very, very, very bad. Rau says, the question is, “Does the school, or does the society, really want to have intelligent, well-educated children, or not?” He says, “If you install mobile phone towers,
which radiate to the children, their intelligence, their brain capacity, decreases. You will have more ADD children, you will have less function of the brain, which in the long term reflects on the intelligence of the children, of the possibility to really teach children, and in the long term, the more this overcomes society, the
more we will have dumb children.”

The reality of the health consequences of electromagnetic radiation eventually will have to be faced, and this will only happen with active pressure on Congress. It is estimated that 3-8% of populations in developed countries experience serious electrohypersensitivity symptoms today, and 35% experience mild symptoms.
With increasing electromagnetic field exposures, these numbers, along with the suffering involved for people who are impacted, and the health care costs involved, are bound to go up.

Monday, February 9, 2009

Progressive Librarians Guild Statement on WiFi in Libraries and the Precautionary Principle

Progressive Librarians Guild
Rider University Library
2083 Lawrenceville Rd.
Lawrenceville, NJ 08648

June 16, 2008

Often unaware of the potential risks to both library staff and the public, libraries have adopted wireless technology as a means to bridge the Digital Divide and in order to fulfill their mission under the Library Bill of Rights.

Research on the health effects of wireless technologies (2.4GHz and 5.0GHz bands and electromagnetic (microwave) radiation indicates wireless technology, among other effects, may cause immune dysfunction, increased risk of brain tumors and acoustic neuromas, childhood cancers, breast cancer, Alzheimer’s disease (European Environment Agency, Bioinitiative Working Group, 2007), and genotoxicity. Research also indicates that public health standards are inadequate in offering guidance on the use of wireless technologies in community spaces.

The Precautionary Principle can act as a policy guide in which to critically debate the risks and benefits of wireless technology. The European Environmental Agency, Bioinitiative Working Group and the International Commission for Electromagnetic Safety through the Benevento Resolution have called for the application of the Precautionary Principle in the use of wireless technology. In the United States, the Wingspread Statement on the Precautionary Principle (1998) states

When an activity raises threats of harm to human health or the environment, precautionary measures should be taken even if some cause and effect relationships are not fully established scientifically...

Therefore, exposure to wireless technologies in the above bandwidths is a public health issue that library workers should address philosophically as a profession and directly in terms of daily library operations, programs, and services. European library workers have taken steps calling for such an examination based on the current research on health effects of wireless. The Bibliothèque Nationale de France has forgone installation of a public wireless system and the staff of the Sainte Geneviève Library (Paris V) has called for a discussion on wireless technology safety in university and public libraries based in part on the conclusions reached by the European Environmental Agency BioInitiative Working Group (2007,4, 26):

Although this RF target level does not preclude further rollout of WI-FI technologies, we also recommend that wired alternatives to WIFI be implemented, particularly in schools and libraries so that children are not subjected to elevated RF levels until more is understood about possible health impacts. This recommendation should be seen as an interim precautionary limit that is intended to guide preventative actions; and more conservative limits may be needed in the future.

Based on this information, Progressive Librarians Guild recommends that via their professional organizations, information workers address the risks of wireless technology in public spaces, take steps in learning about the risks of wireless in terms of exposure and impact on library services, monitor wireless technology in their facilities critically evaluate and adopt alternatives to wireless technology especially in children’s sections of libraries, create warning signage on risks of wifi throughout their libraries, and act as a community resource in the public education on wireless technologies.


Notes

1. Wireless-B, or “IEEE 802.11b” standard operates on the 2.4 GHz band.Wireless-G, or IEEE 802.11g, using the same frequency band, but capable of higher speeds. Wireless-A (IEEE 802.11a) uses the 5.0 GHz band, a higher data transfer. Wireless-N, using both 2.4 and 5.0 GHz bands, with proposed data transfer capability exceeding wired networks. See “Wireless Standards,” http://compnetworking.about.com/cs/wireless80211/a/aa80211standard.htm.

2. Genotoxic or genotoxicity: capable of causing damage to DNA. See Lai, below, a review of the literature on wireless and genotoxicity.

3. Benevento uses 0 to 300 GHz as a baseline for recommendations.

4. 2400 MHz mentioned in the Bibliothèque Nationale de France press release is synonymous with 2.4 GHz.

5. Inexpensive AC gauss meters which measure 1-5 GHz can be found on the Web at stores such as EMF Safety Superstore.

6. For example, one alternative is the Panasonic HD-PLC power line network adapter uses electrical wiring (power outlet) as a link between a PC and modem. The adaptor is available through amazon.com.

7. Thanks to Carolyn Raffensperger and Ted Schettler at the Science and Environmental Health Network, Rebekah Azen, SJSU SLIS students Abe Ignacio, and Milton John Kleim, Jr. for their comments.

References

American Library Association. Library Bill of Rights. 1948, 1996 (accessed May 29, 2008).

Anders Ahlbom, et al. “Epidemiology of Health Effects of Radiofrequency Exposure: CNIRP (International Commission for Non-Ionizing Radiation Protection.” Environmental Health Perspectives 112 no. 17(2004): 1741–1754 (accessed May 27, 2008).

Collaborative on Health and the Environment. Consensus Statement on Electromagnetic Radiation Draft, October 10, 2006 (accessed May 22, 2008).

Environmental Research Foundation. Precaution Reporter #67, December 6, 2006 (accessed May 22, 2008).

European Environmental Agency. “Radiation Risk from Everyday Devices Assessed.” September, 2007 (accessed June 1, 2008)


European Environmental Agency, BioInitiative Working Group. Bioinitiative: A Rationale for a Biologically-based Public Exposure Standard for Electromagnetic Fields (ELF and RF) August 31, 2007 (accessed May 22, 2008).

The French National Library Renounces WiFi,” Press Release, April 4, 2008. English | Francaise: “La Bibliothèque Nationale renonce au Wi-Fi,”4 Avril 2008, (accessed May 27, 2008).

Harremoës, Poul, eds., et al. Late Lessons from Early Warnings: the Precautionary Principle 1896-2000. Environmental Issue Report No. 22, European Environment Agency, January 10, 2002 (accessed June 1, 2008).

EEE. “Wireless Fidelity – WiFi”(accessed May 22, 2008).

International Commission for Electromagnetic Safety. Benevento Resolution, Benevento, Italy, on February 22, 23 & 24, 2006 (accessed May 22, 2008).

Labor Institute, NYC. Electromagnetic Fields (EMFs): A Training Workbook for Working People. New York: New York (State). Occupational Safety and Health Training and Education Program, 199?.

Lai, Henry.“Evidence for Genotoxic Effects – RFR and ELF DNA Damage.”European Environmental Agency, BioInitiative Working Group. Bioinitiative: A Rationale for a Biologically-Based Public Exposure Standard for Electromagnetic Fields. August 31, 2007. Section 6, 1-43 (accessed May 22, 2008).

Lakehead University. “WiFi Policy.” January 1, 2004 (accessed May 22, 2008).

Lee, S. et al. "2.45 GHz Radiofrequency Fields Alter Gene Expression in Cultured Human Cells. "FEBS Letters (Federation of European Biochemical Societies) 579 no. 21 (2005):4829-36.

Science and Environmental Health Network. The Precautionary Principle (accessed May 22, 2008).

Thatcher, Diana. "Librarians: Keep Public Library Wi-Fi Free. Sante Fe New Mexican June 8, 2008 (accessed June 8, 2008).

WEEP. “French Library Gives up WiFi.” April 7, 2008 (accessed May 22, 2008).

World Health Organization. Electromagnetic Fields and Public Health: Exposure to Extremely Low Frequency Fields. June, 2007 (accessed May 30, 2008).

Wingspread Consensus Statement on the Precautionary Principle, January 26, 1998 (accessed May 22, 2008).

A ticking time bomb?




Philip Parkin

When I wrote to Alan Johnson, then secretary of state for education and skills in April 2007, expressing my concern about the potential effects of Wi-Fi networks in schools, he replied, reassuring me that Becta, the government’s education technology agency, had a responsibility for e-safety and that there was “no consistent evidence of health effects from RF (radio frequency) exposures below guideline levels”, and that “exposures should be well within internationally accepted guidelines”.

Having spent two days in September at the Radiation Research Trust’s conference, EMF and Health A Global Issue, at which scientists on both sides of the debate expressed their views, I find that I continue to have concerns.

I am not a scientist and cannot claim to understand all of the science, but when world-renowned experts in their fields are unable to agree, I understand enough for it to raise concerns with me.

There was general agreement at the conference (including the representative of the mobile phone industry) that two issues are of particular concern.

First, the health effects of long-term use (over 10 years) of mobile phones. Professor Hardell, from Sweden, reported on his research which showed that people who started mobile phone use before the age of 20 had a more than five-fold increase in glioma (a cancer of the glial cells which support the central nervous system).

Second, the use of mobile phones by children and the risk of cancer. There is disregard and ignorance of the current Health Protection Agency guidelines in this country. Clearly the current generation of children is likely to be the first to have used such devices from an early age and to be those who will use them in the long-term. As well as the risk of cancer, there is concern that such exposure, when children’s nervous systems are still forming and their skulls are thin, can affect cognitive development and cell structures.

Dr George Carlo from America stated that: “When a signal is picked up by a cell membrane it is seen as an environmental stressor which increases the permeability of cell membranes.”

Professor David Coggan, chair of the UK Mobile Telecommunications and Health Research Programme, said that he would at some point like to be able to fund a study of cognitive development and symptoms in secondary school pupils.

He also highlighted the need to monitor the incidence of childhood cancers at different ages.

A number of other issues raised also failed to reassure me that there is nothing to be concerned about. Not least that international guidelines are out of date and inadequate and some scientists at the conference made it quite clear that they had little faith in them.

Exposure levels are only half the story; length of exposure being the other half. Long exposures at lower intensity levels may be as damaging as high exposure levels for short periods. Hence my concern about wireless networks in schools and nurseries.

Also, that cell changes caused by electro-magnetic radiation are not regarded as health effects despite them having potentially long-term genetic consequences. I noted that David Carpenter, from America, said that there was an overwhelming body of biological evidence which suggested a need to protect children. This was supported by Russia’s Professor Yury Grigoriev, who said that the potential risk to children’s health was very high and was a completely new problem; and that it was necessary to develop special standards for the protection of children.

And that exposure to mobile phone base stations is not voluntary (unlike the use of phone handsets) and is continuous, 24 hours a day; and that locating in sensitive areas, such as near schools, should be avoided.

I continue to take the view, until someone convinces me otherwise, that there would appear to be enough accumulating evidence to suggest that a precautionary approach to these matters would be wise; and that the potential long-term effects upon children need serious and sustained scientific study.

• Philip Parkin is general secretary of the Voice education union.

Visit www.voicetheunion.org.uk/wifi

Sunday, February 8, 2009

The gathering brainstorm




Article in http://www.theecologist.org/
Mark Anslow 13/03/2008


It is unregulated, untested, more dangerous than its proponents would have you believe ?and soon to become even more powerful. Mark Anslow reports on the inexorable march of Wi-Fi


In early summer of 1997, computer scientist and former Dutch military radar engineer Vic Hayes joined the end of a long line of scientists and smiled at the camera. The shutter clicked, celebrating the official launch of the first international Wi-Fi standard.

In early summer of 1997, computer scientist and former Dutch military radar engineer Vic Hayes joined the end of a long line of scientists and smiled at the camera. The shutter clicked, celebrating the official launch of the first international Wi-Fi standard.

Originally designed to connect together cash-registers at checkouts, the ambitious scientist made no secret of his desires for the new technology. ‘I see Wi-Fi being used for everything eventually,’ he was quoted as saying, but not even he could have predicted how widespread his invention would become.

By 2008, experts predict that there will be 53 million Wi-Fi enabled devices in Europe alone. One in every five UK adults already owns a Wi-Fi enabled laptop, and 80 per cent of secondary schools in the UK have installed the technology throughout their buildings. McDonald’s recently announced that free Wi- Fi facilities would be available in all its restaurants, and the growing ‘Mu-Fi’ initiative – where entire municipalities receive Wi-Fi coverage – has already made Norwich the UK’s first ‘Wi-Fi town’.

The technology is sold to the public as the ultimate convenience tool: it allows you to grab a coffee and check your email on the go, to print photos without using a wire or listen to music on speakers not even attached to a computer. In schools, teachers can already give lessons using Wi-Fi white-boards, and in the near future hand-held Wi-Fi terminals will enable children to ‘interact’ with digital lesson. In the words of the technology’s industry group, the Wi-Fi Alliance: ‘Simply put, Wi-Fi is freedom.’

But freedom at what cost?

Wi-Fi appeared on our shelves without having to undergo any tests or safety checks whatsoever. This was partly achieved because Vic Hayes and his team developed Wi-Fi to use an unlicensed part of the radio spectrum – freed-up airwaves designed to encourage more widespread public use of wireless technology. As long as the technology met basic requirements on interference and compatibility, consumers were free to buy and use Wi-Fi devices as they and the manufacturers saw fit. In the UK, the spectrum used by Wi-Fi (2.4 gigahertz) became available for unlicensed use in 2000.

Denis Henshaw, professor of physics at the University of Bristol, finds it remarkable Wi- Fi-enabled equipment could have come to market without having to undergo any trials.

‘If you are a drug company marketing a new drug, you have to go through years of testing to prove your product is safe,’ he says. ‘If you’re a Wi-Fi developer using the 2.4 GHz spectrum, however, you don’t need to prove anything.’

Concerns were first raised about the health effects of Wi-Fi as early as 2000. A report by the British Educational Communications and Technology Agency (BECTA), the body responsible for the use of IT in schools, noted that engineers installing some of the first classroom-based systems complained of headaches at the end of the day. The report was never published, but was eventually leaked to The Times Educational Supplement seven years later.

In 2003, concerned parents of children in suburban Chicago filed a lawsuit against the Oak Park Elementary School on the basis of concerns over the possible adverse health effects of the school’s Wi-Fi network. The father who made the claim, Ron Baiman, said he acted because ‘there are a lot of experts who say there are potential risks’.

For years, it was left to distressed teachers or parents with children suffering from repeated headaches to act as unpaid regulators, gathering together scientific papers and lobbying schools to have Wi-Fi systems taken down. In 2006, a school in Chichester made headlines after its headteacher agreed to remove a network at the request of both parents and teachers. The headteacher told The Times he had acted out of concern for the parents’ views. ‘We also did a lot of research,’ he added. ‘The authorities say it’s safe, but there have been no long-term studies to prove this.’

The case was something of a turning point. National newspapers began to pay attention to data collected by campaign groups that had long been fighting the mobile phone industry. The campaigners pointed out that the type of radiation emitted from Wi-Fi devices, although on a slightly different wavelength, was essentially the same as that used by mobile phones and their transmitter masts. Both systems use high-frequency microwaves that are ‘pulsed’ rapidly on and off to transmit data.

This pulsed aspect of data transmission is important, because it means that, although a signal might appear to be low-powered when measured over a period of time, it could reach ‘spikes’ of much higher levels when data is actually being transmitted. Campaigners were also at pains to show that Wi-Fi was just a part of a whole host of technologies using the same microwave system, including baby monitors, DECT cordless phones, and Bluetooth computer devices (see below).

In May 2007, the BBC’s Panorama programme investigated the signal strengths used by Wi-Fi equipment. Under the guidance of mobile phone concern group PowerWatch, the programme measured the intensity of microwaves 150 metres away from a mobile phone transmitter mast, and half a metre away from a laptop computer – realistic distances at which everyday exposure might occur. They found that the radiation from the Wi-Fi-enabled laptop was at least as high, if not higher, than that measured in the main beam of the mast (see below).


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How microwaves affect us

There are many different theories on how electromagnetic radiation interacts with our bodies, but pulsed microwave radiation, such as that used by Wi-Fi and mobile phones, is thought to affect the body’s cells in a unique way.

Although microwaves oscillate (change direction) many thousands of times each second, the carrier pulses which convey your voice or emails along the signal actually oscillate at a much slower rate, only hundreds of times a second. This slower rate allows the pulses to interact with protein vibrational receptors, like microscopic hairs, on the membranes of our cells.

The cells interpret this unusual stimulation as a foreign invader and react as any organism would – by closing down the cell membrane. This impairs the flow of nutrients into the cell or waste products on their way out. It also disrupts inter-cellular communication, meaning that clusters of cells that form tissues can no longer work as effectively together.

The increase of trapped waste products can lead to an increase in the number of cancer-causing ‘free radicals’. Worse still, a chemical known as ‘messenger RN A’ inside the cell passes on this ‘learned response’ to daughter cells, meaning that the cell’s offspring also learn to interpret microwaves as an external threat and react in the same way.

This disruption in the cellular processes is thought to lead to the many and various symptoms of electrosensitivity, and the build-up of free radicals released when the cell dies could be connected with the increase in tumours seen in those exposed to frequent doses of microwave radiation.

Special circumstances can enhance the process even further. The effects are likely to be worse in people with damaged or developing immune systems, particularly children, and certain drugs can dramatically increase the risk of negative microwave effects.


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The programme was fiercely criticised by the telecommunications industry, partly because it feared the logical conclusion – that the battery of research built up over the past decade demonstrating very clear health risks from exposure to mobile phone masts could now be translated almost exactly into the risks faced by exposure to Wi-Fi equipment (see ‘Weight of evidence’ at bottom).

Concern was further raised by comments made on the programme by the chairman of the Health Protection Agency (HPA), Sir William Stewart. Stewart, former Government Chief Scientist under Margaret Thatcher, had compiled a seminal report on mobile phones in 2000, in which he recommended that the main beam from a mobile phone mast should never be allowed to fall on school premises. He told Panorama unequivocally that both phones and masts could be responsible for triggering cancer, changes in mental function and damaging effects to the body’s cells. He also said that the approach adopted by the World Health Organisation, which directly influences UK health policy, was not ‘an accurate reflection’ of the current science.

The HPA scrambled to calm the storm caused by its maverick chairman. Having first tried to deny Stewart had in fact made any claims against Wi-Fi, the Agency went on to change one of its online press releases; now, instead of asserting there was ‘no evidence’ that Wi-Fi could have an effect on health, it stated there was ‘no consistent evidence’. The current HPA guidelines on Wi-Fi, to which all other UK Government departments refer, state: ‘There is no consistent evidence to date that Wi-Fi and WLANs [wireless networks] adversely affect the health of the general population. The signals are very low power, typically 0.1 watt (100 milliwatts) in both the computer and the router (access point) and the results so far show exposures are well within internationally accepted (ICNIRP) guidelines.’

So what exactly is ICNIRP, the institution that determines the maximum safe radio wave dosage for all UK citizens? The International Commission on Non-Ionising Radiation Protection was formed in 1992, but has its roots in an earlier body founded in 1970s.

Alasdair Philips, founder of PowerWatch, describes it as ‘an incredibly conservative organisation’: ‘ICNIRP grew out of the International Radiation Protection Association (IRPA), which was founded in 1950s and primarily staffed by the nuclear industry. Even when it became separate, ICNIRP retained a strong industry bias. It is highly secretive and access to the Commission is by invitation only.’

In 1998, ICNIRP published the document by which all countries with a seat on the Commission – which includes most of Europe and the US – still set their non-ionising radiation guidelines today. In the section that examines the relationship between cancer and exposure to microwaves, the ICNIRP authors cite seven studies to support their conclusion that radio waves do not increase tumour rates. None of these was conducted after 1997 – the date when Wi-Fi was first introduced – and in fact two were conducted before the 1980s.

Three of the studies in the ICNIRP report involve the exposure of military or civilian personnel to high-power radar systems; another investigates an incident during the Cold War in which Soviet agents irradiated the US embassy with microwaves, while another investigates the effects of oldfashioned cathode ray-tube computer monitors. One study looks at the effects of radio transmissions, but was later shown to have drawn seriously flawed conclusions. The authors of the only study of the seven to have investigated the health effects of mobile phones admit their research was not designed to show the long-term impact of handset use, which is where any cancerous effects would be found.

Later analyses of many of these papers show ICNIRP deliberately misquoted or misconstrued the original authors’ conclusions, disguising evidence of tumours when the research offered a clear link to microwave exposure.

When, later in the same guidelines, ICNIRP dismisses the evidence for DNA damage by microwaves, it points to papers written by the UK’s National Radiological Protection Board and the World Health Organization (both of which act on the advice of ICNIRP), as well as a paper by parent organisation, the IRPA.

ICNIRP appears at the centre of a hub of likeminded bodies determined to corroborate each other’s research.

The flaws in ICNIRP’s guidelines did not go unnoticed. The year they were published, 16 internationally recognised scientists signed the Vienna Resolution, which accused the ICNIRP researchers of ignoring the fact that ‘numerous studies published in recent years did show biological effects below their recommended limit values.’ In 1999, when Australian scientists came to examine ICNIRP recommendations they concluded that the guidelines ‘cannot be said?to constitute a precautionary measure’. Australia consequently refused to join the Commission and developed its own standards.

These substantial concerns, as well as the fact that most of the research on which ICNIRP’s guidelines are based was published before Wi-Fi had even left the laboratory, have not been heeded by any of ICNIRP’s signatories. The UK’s regulators still use and defer to the 1998 guidelines, which set levels designed only to prevent ‘thermal effects’ (or heating up) due to microwave radiation. In fact, most of the negative effects now attributed to microwaves occur at levels far below those in the ICNIRP guidelines, and are known as ‘nonthermal effects’. These include effects on the blood-brain barrier, an increase in the production of cancer-causing free radicals, a decrease in bodily melatonin, and disruptions in intra-cellular communication (see ‘How microwaves affect us’).

In response to the media outcry, and the public admissions by William Stewart, the HPA announced in October 2007 that it would launch a programme of research into the health effects of Wi-Fi. Initial optimism forthe proposal quickly faded when campaigners discovered that the project would merely ‘measure exposures to radio signals from wireless computer networks’, and compare them to ‘international guidelines’.

‘This research has already been done,’ says Graham Philips of PowerWatch. ‘To spend £300,000 of taxpayers’ money on measuring exposure to Wi-Fi and then comparing the data to 10-year-old ICNIRP guidelines is a complete and utter farce.’

If recent cases of research into the health risks of mobile phone transmitter masts are anything to go by, Philips is right to be angry. In July 2007, the results of a two-year research project joint-funded by the Government and the mobile phone industry were published. The study, run by researchers in a flagship facility at Essex University, had set out to investigate whether people who claimed they suffered health effects because of microwave radiation (known as ‘electrosensitives’) could tell if a hidden mobile mast was switched on or off at any given time. At a high-profile launch in London’s Science Media Centre – from which representatives of pressure groups and nonmainstream media were banned – the researchers told the press that no significant results had been found and that any electrosensitives who claimed they were affected by radiation should start to look for other, psychological, causes for their distress.

Faced with tight deadlines and information from a supposedly reliable Government research programme, the journalists repeated to their editors and readers exactly what they had been told at the launch. But the study, which has been cited worldwide to dismiss health concerns over microwave radiation, is now mired in controversy.

Basic errors in arithmetic have been found and admitted by the researchers. The scientists also confess that they failed to recruit enough participants, and as such the study’s statistical power (the ability of research to predict ‘real world’ effects) falls below that considered acceptable in social science. In addition, because so few participants were found, the researchers were unable to ‘screen’ them to see if their symptoms corresponded to the known attributes of electrosensitivity.

The researchers also began the experiment by spending three months using equipment designed to simulate a mobile phone mast, which was not sending out realistic signals. The laboratory equipment was missing a crucial frequency that exists in real-world mobile mast broadcasts and is thought to contribute to headaches and other neurophysiological effects. Alasdair Philips was invited in to correct the equipment, but data collected using the incorrect settings as still used in the final analysis.

When the Ecologist challenged one of the paper’s lead authors, Professor Elaine Fox, over why her team had chosen to tell the world’s media that electrosensitivity – a condition medically recognised by the Swedish government – was a myth, she told us: ‘It seems unreasonable to conclude that there is an effect, when almost 900 sensitive people have been tested under double-blind conditions (Rubin et al, metaanalysis, 2005; Regel et al, EHP, 2006, and Eltiti et al, EHP, 2007). These studies are extremely expensive and it now seems more reasonable to start looking for other causes, given the growing evidence.’

A fair defence, until examined more closely. Rubin et al’s ‘meta-analysis’, which was published, notably, in the Journal of Psychosomatic Medicine, is simply a review of 25 studies of varying quality, of which only seven exposed participants to mobile phonetype radiation; of these, three studies actually had found evidence of adverse health effects. Elaine Fox also fails to mention that the Regel et al study in fact concludes that some subjects were able consistently to tell whether a mobile mast was switched on or off, and that in its conclusion, the paper admits that an effect on brain function could not be discounted.

Moreover, the study run at Essex University had been specifically commissioned to make up for failings in earlier studies, so then to defend the study by citing earlier ones seems dubious at best.

Ultimately, however, the HPA’s new investigation into the risks of Wi-Fi will be of little importance. The reason for this lies not in the airwaves, but in the bundle of data cables that runs beneath your feet.

Internet capacity in the UK is at breaking point. Soaring demand for video services, internet radio, file swapping and web phone services has meant that an ageing system of copper wires originally installed only for telephone calls can no longer cope. In a report by the consultancy firm Deloitte, it was estimated that 2007 may in fact see the internet reach ‘peak capacity’.

No government, much less one that depends upon the success of a ‘knowledge economy’ such as the UK’s, can afford to let this happen. To lose speed and capacity on your internet network translates into lost business, innovation and tax revenue.

Desperate to encourage ways around this bottleneck, the UK’s communications regulator, Ofcom, announced in summer 2007 that it was planning to auction off a slice of the microwave spectrum around the 2.5 GHz frequency.

The industry nearly fell over itself with excitement. Ofcom knew that this particular frequency band was perfect for a new type of wireless broadband service known as WiMAX. Described by the industry as ‘Wi-Fi on steroids’, WiMAX uses centrally placed masts (like mobile phone masts) to transmit high-speed internet across towns and rural areas, thereby bypassing capacity problems in using BT’s old-fashioned copper wires and the disruption from digging up roads and gardens to lay new cables.

In order to achieve wider coverage, the WiMAX masts are allowed to operate at power levels significantly above those of conventional masts, and the receiver units, which Intel is preparing to build into laptops from 2008 onwards, have been authorised to emit microwaves at up to twice the power level of conventional Wi-Fi equipment.

By 2008, when the HPA will only be halfway through its ‘inquiry’ into the health effects of conventional Wi-Fi, the chief executive of Intel, Paul Otellini, estimates that 150 million Americans alone will already be within range of a WiMAX transmitter, and many thousands of will be using a WiMAX-enabled laptop. Ofcom is already encouraging WiMAX systems in the UK, allowing telecoms companies to ‘increase power levels’ on rural transmitters in what is described as an effort to ‘close the digital divide’. The technology is now moving far faster than it can be tested or regulated.

When the spectrum auction was first announced, an Ofcom spokesman told an industry reporter: ‘Our whole approach to spectrum management is that the market is better placed to decide how to use spectrum than the regulator’.

The German government is advising its citizens to limit their exposure to Wi-Fi systems wherever possible, and to use wired alternatives. The local government in Salzburg, Austria, has set legally binding limits for radiation from masts that is thousands of times below international standards. The Swedish government officially recognises electrosensitivity as a medical problem. The Australian government has rejected the ICNIRP guidelines on microwave exposure as inadequate.

In the UK, however, the final decision on which powerful new Wi-Fi technologies are allowed into our homes, schools, offices and towns will rest with a powerful coalition of IT developers, internet service providers and lame duck regulators.

For more information:
PowerWatch: www.powerwatch.org.uk
Mast Sanity: www.mastsanity.org
HESE project: www.hese-project.org
Safe Wireless Initiative: www.safewireless.org

What can we do?

Government needs to:

Call for an immediate review of the ICN IRP exposure guidelines, inviting nonindustry researchers to the table, and require schools to remove Wi-Fi installations and replace them with wired alternatives. Industry needs to: develop wireless devices that operate at far lower power levels and extensively market wired alternatives to wireless products.

You need to:

(1) disable the wireless transmitter on your family’s laptop/ computer via the software;
(2) remove as many microwave devices from your home as possible, and investigate wired alternatives;
(3) contact the groups listed at the end of this article for help in lobbying your children’s school or your workplace to remove Wi- Fi equipment;
(4) aim to use your mobile phone for as little time as possible.

Weight of evidence

All studies listed below have found adverse health effects from microwaves at levels similar to those emitted by Wi-Fi equipment:

Santini et al, 2002: 530 people living near mobile phone masts reported more symptoms of headache, sleep disturbance, discomfort, irritability, depression, memory loss and concentration problems the closer they lived to the mast.

Oberfeld et al, 2004: 97 people living near mobile phone masts reported more symptoms of fatigue, irritability, headaches, nausea, loss of memory, visual disorder, dizziness and cardiovascular problems the higher their level of microwave exposure.

Eger et al, 2004: A three-fold increase in the incidence of malignant tumours was found after five years’ exposure in people living 400 metres from a mobile phone mast.

Wolf & Wolf, 2004: A four-fold increase in the incidence of cancer among residents living near a mobile phone mast for between three and seven years was detected.

REFLEX, 2004: A four-year study on human cells found that, after exposure to lowpower microwaves, they showed signs of DN A damage and mutations that were passed on to the next generation.

Abdel-Rassoul, 2007: Residents living beneath and opposite a long-established mobile phone mast in Egypt reported significantly higher occurrences of headaches, memory changes, dizziness, tremors, depressive symptoms and sleep disturbance than a control group.

Bortkiewicz et al, 2004: Residents close to mobile phone masts reported more incidences of circulatory problems, sleep disturbances, irritability, depression, blurred vision and concentration difficulties the nearer they lived to the mast.

Hutter et al, 2006: 365 people living near mobile phone masts reported higher incidences of headaches the closer they lived to the masts.

Stewart report, 2000: Research conducted by HPA chief William Stewart advised the main beam of a mobile phone mast should not be allowed to fall on any part of a school’s grounds.

Hecht & Balzer, 1997: A huge review of studies concluded a vast array of health effects, including insomnia, brainwave changes, cardiovascular problems and increased susceptibility to infections.

Carpenter & Sage, 2007: Concluded that an maximum outdoor exposure limit of 0.6 V/ m should be set, and that Wi-Fi systems should be replaced with wired alternatives.

ECOLOG-Institut, 2000: Found evidence for increases in immune and central nervous system damage, and reduced cognitive function. Recommended an exposure limit 1,000 times lower than current guidelines.

Kolodynski & Kolodynska, 1999: School children living near a radio location station in Latvia suffered reduced motor function, memory and attention spans.


First appeared in The Ecologist December 2007