Scientists Serious About 'Electricity Sickness' Claims
Christians Against Zionism
- January
2
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Reports by Nic Fleming, Health Correspondent
(Filed: 24/01/2005)
Scientists and health advisers are taking the claims of people who say
electricity makes them ill seriously for the first time.
The National Radiological Protection Board (NRPB) is carrying out a review of
existing scientific studies into "electromagnetic hypersensitivity" (EHS).
Brian Stein
Brian Stein suffers from electromagnetic hypersensitivity
Click here for his story
Two studies into the condition, funded with £750,000 from the Department of
Health and the telecommunications industry, are already under way.
Sir William Stewart, the government's adviser on radiation, has called for more
research into the issue.
Some researchers believe a proportion of the population suffers ill health, with
symptoms including fatigue, severe headaches and skin problems, because of
exposure to electromagnetic fields. Other scientists say there is no evidence.
The Swedish government, which recognised EHS as a physical impairment in 2000,
calculates that 3.1 per cent of its population – 200,000 people – suffer from
the condition. A recent warning by Sir William, head of the NRPB and the Health
Protection Agency, that parents should limit their children's use of mobile
phones received widespread publicity.
However, his suggestion that another section of the population, as well as the
young, could have extra sensitivity to exposure to either radio frequency fields
from mobiles or electromagnetic fields in general did not.
The NRPB has commissioned Dr Neil Irvine, of the Health Protection Agency, to
carry out a review of existing scientific literature on EHS.
His report, focusing on symptoms, prognosis and treatment, will be published in
the summer.
The Mobile Telecommunications and Health Research programme, funded by the
Government and the telecommunications industry, is spending £8.6 million on 29
studies, two of which will investigate EHS.
A team at King's College, London, is looking at whether mobile phones cause
symptoms such as headaches, nausea and fatigue in those who claim to be
hypersensitive and those who do not.
Researchers at the University of Essex are exposing two groups of volunteers to
signals from a mobile mast to test if cognitive functions such as attention span
and memory are affected. Half will be people who say they suffer EHS.
Dr David Dowson, a former GP who is now a complementary medicine specialist
based in Bath, said he had seen around 10 patients he believed to be suffering
from EHS. "I think the condition is increasing in prevalence, because we are
living in a more electrically polluted environment."
Olle Johansson, associate professor of neuroscience at the Karolinska Institute
in Sweden, has been studying EHS for 20 years.
He has shown in experiments that there is an increase in the number of mast
cells near the surface of skin when exposed to electromagnetic fields, a similar
reaction to that when it is exposed to radioactive material.
He said: "If you put a radio near a source of EMFs you will get interference.
The human brain has an electric field so if you put sources of EMFs nearby, it
is not surprising that you get interference, interaction with systems and damage
to cells and molecules.''
Others say the condition is in the mind.
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13 December 2004: Volunteers tested on phone mast 'dangers'
7 April 2004[Connected]: Radiation rules made stricter 'as precaution'
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External links
National Radiological Protection Board