Is modern
life making us ill? Yes, say those who suffer from electrosensitivity. Are they
cranks, or should we all be throwing away our mobile phones?
Michelle
Berriedale-Johnson, 65, is wearing a jacket made from a silver-coated material
that reduces the strength of electromagnetic fields
Tim Hallam,
36, sleeps in a custom-made silver-coated sleeping bag that helps block out
electromagnetic fields
Tim Hallam is just tall enough to seem gangly. His height
makes the bedroom feel even smaller than it is. Muddy sunlight filters through
the grey gauze hung over his window. His narrow bed appears to be covered with
a glistening silver mosquito net. The door and the ceiling are lined with
tinfoil. Tim tells me there is also a layer of foil beneath the wallpaper and
under the wood-effect flooring. He says, "The room is completely
insulated; the edges are sealed with aluminium tape and connected with
conducting tape so I could ground the whole room. It's a Faraday cage,
effectively. Grounding helps with the low frequencies radiation, apparently.
The high frequencies just bounce off the outside."
Tim is trying to escape atmospheric manmade radiation caused
by Wi-Fi, phone signals, radio, even TV screens and fluorescent bulbs. It's a
hopeless task, he admits: "It's so hard to get away from, and it's taken a
toll on my life." I offer to put my phone outside the room and he happily
accepts, firmly closing the door. He explains the phone would have kept
searching for a signal. "And because it wouldn't find one, it would keep
ramping up." With the tinfoil inside his cage, the signal would hurtle
around the room like a panicked bird.
Tim estimates he spent £1,000 on the insulation, taking
photographs at every stage to share with others via ElectroSensitivity UK, the
society for sufferers. He found the whole process stressful, especially after a
summer sleeping in the garden of his shared house in Leamington Spa to escape a
new flatmate's powerful Wi-Fi router. How did he feel about the flatmate at the
time? "Oh, I hated him. It wasn't really him, of course. But I was so
angry." Among the symptoms Tim experiences – headaches, muscular pain, dry
eyes – there are memory lapses and irritability. He now says his bed is the
single most important thing he owns. "I climb in and zip it up so I'm
completely sealed. Inside, I sleep extremely well. Without it, my sleep is
fragmented, and without sleep, then lots of other things go wrong."
Tim demonstrates the effectiveness of the tinfoil using a
radiation detector called Elektrosmog, manufactured in Germany. It is blocky
and white, which makes it look both retro and futuristic. On the front of the
box, a picture of an electricity pylon is surrounded by jagged black lightning
flashes. The machine gives a reading close to zero: Tim's room is
radiation-free.
As a child in the 70s, I watched a BBC science-fiction
serial called The Changes, which imagined a future after humans became allergic
to electricity. Pylons were the greatest danger, making people violently sick.
On cross-country runs, I would speed up when I had to pass beneath a power
cable, feeling the weight of the buzzing electricity above me. The idea that
electromagnetic fields affect our health took root in the 1960s. A US doctor
named Robert O Becker became the face of the campaign against pylons after
appearing on the US TV show 60 Minutes. Professor Andrew Marino, now of
Louisiana State University, was Becker's lab partner. Marino says, "He's
the reason nobody wants to live near power lines."
If electromagnetic radiation is dangerous to humans, there
are far more risks now than 40 years ago, thanks to the telecommunications
industry. More than a billion people worldwide own mobile phones. In the UK,
there are more mobile contracts than people. The new 4G spectrum will cover 98%
of the country, erasing all but the most remote "not spots".
Dr Mireille Toledano runs Cosmos, a 30-year, five-nation
study into the effects of telecoms radiation on humans. She knows how rapidly
things are changing. In 2000, a 10-year study into mobile phones and brain tumours
pegged heavy use at 30 minutes a day. The study found the 90th percentile had
spent 1,640 hours of their lives on their phones. In the UK, Toledano says,
"heavy use is now defined at 86 minutes a day; 30 minutes is in the median
range. Across the whole [international Cosmos study], the top 10% of users have
now clocked up 4,160 or more hours."
The earlier study found no evidence linking phone use and
cancer in the short term, yet as our love affair with technology keeps
deepening, anxieties grow. Two years ago, the European Assembly passed
Resolution 1815, which, among other things, calls for restrictions on Wi-Fi in
schools and the use of mobile phones by children. The World Health Organisation
has classified electromagnetic fields of the kind used in mobile telephony as
Group 2b carcinogens – that is, as possibly cancerous.
The issue of electromagnetic sensitivity is immediately
political. It places sufferers on the other side from both industry and the
governments that profit from leasing wavelengths. Over and over, I hear the
phrase, "We are the canaries in the coal mine": sufferers believe we
are approaching a tipping point. Tim Hallam worries about the effects of
electromagnetic fields on the most vulnerable: on his sister's young family; on
children in schools bathed in Wi-Fi rays; or old people in sheltered
accommodation, each with their own internet router. "I think it's
affecting everyone's cells. There are test-tube experiments which show it
damages DNA and affects the blood-brain barrier. I do think there's going to be
a surge in the people who are sensitive in years to come. But my sister's not
fully taken that on board."
Yet electro hypersensitivity syndrome is controversial.
Sweden recognises EHS as a "functional impairment", or disability,
but it is the patients, not doctors, who make the diagnosis. The fact is,
everyone who suffers from EHS is self-diagnosed – and each has their own story
to explain the cause of their problems.
Tim was 15 years old, at a gig by the industrial band Sheep
on Drugs, when the singer produced a pistol and fired blanks into the ceiling.
Tim, who is now 36, says, "It was the loudest thing I had ever
heard." His ears began ringing but he continued going to gigs without
using ear plugs and the problem grew worse. He played clarinet in two
orchestras but had to stop: "Immediately, my musical life and my social
life ended." Today, his sister is a professional classical musician. Tim,
a Cambridge graduate, is a van driver for Asda. He works shifts that allow him
time alone when his flatmates are out and the house is free of Wi-Fi and
phones. It was the arrival of Wi-Fi in his house, just 10 months ago, that led
Tim to identify the cause of his problems, but it was the tinnitus that started
it all.
Michelle Berriedale-Johnson, 65, is wearing a jacket made
from a silver-coated material that reduces the strength of electromagnetic
fields. Photograph: Thomas Ball
Michelle Berriedale-Johnson has worked in the field of food
intolerances and allergies for more than 20 years. She runs the industry awards
for "Free From" foods from her home in north-west London, as well as
foodsmatter.com, a website that raises awareness around food intolerances. Five
years ago, at the age of 60, she began to feel unwell. She was sitting at her
desk when she identified the cause. "I looked up and there was the Royal
Free Hospital with the phone masts on the top, beaming straight through my
window, and it just clicked." Michelle is bright and lively, happy to dive
beneath her desk to show the precautions she has taken to shield herself from
the spaghetti of wires. Her walls are painted with carbon paint, lined with
foil and papered over. The windows have the same netting as Tim's, though when
she uses her Elektrosmog meter she discovers to her consternation that the
netting is old and no longer works. Her front rooms buzz with electromagnetic
radiation, though her office – now at the back of the house – shows far better
readings. She says, "I'm lucky to work from home, but I often feel like a
prisoner." When she leaves the house, she wears hats lined with material
similar to Tim's mosquito netting and even has blouses made of the same
material. "The important thing is to protect your head and upper
torso," she says.
Michelle precisely identifies the moment she became
sensitised to radiation. She was an early user of mobile phones. "Do you
remember the type with the little aerial? I had one where the antenna had
broken off, but I continued to use it pressed to my ear, which people who know
tell me meant that I was using my entire head as an aerial." In her view,
we are all sensitive to electromagnetic fields, but events can tip us over into
hypersensitivity, like a kitchen sink filling so fast that the overflow becomes
overwhelmed and water cascades to the floor.
The problem, in clinical terms, is that
"hypersensitivity" refers either to allergies or to auto-immune
conditions. EHS may be like hay fever or, in extreme cases, like rheumatoid
arthritis but only via analogy. If we speak of "hypersensitivity" we
are using a metaphor – or we are talking about something entirely new. Does
this "new" condition exist?
Long-time researcher Dr Olle Johansson, from Sweden's
Karolinska Institute, coined the term "screen dermatitis" to explain
why computer users in the depths of the Stockholm winter could complain of
sunburn-like symptoms. Johansson has a theory that could explain how extremely
high levels of radiation could affect histamine levels in cells. Yet telecoms
radiation is low and becoming lower as gadgets become more efficient. Johansson
acknowledges that if anyone is found to be truly allergic to their phone it
would be an entirely new kind of allergy, but he hopes that an awareness of EHS
will lead to revolutionary changes. "In Sweden, we take accessibility
measures seriously for disabilities. You think of changes to sidewalks, or
wheelchair access, or ramps on buses. These are also helpful to mothers with
prams, people with shopping or to rollerskaters. The big winner is
everyone." Similarly, he believes that cutting off the telecoms signals
would not only help EHS sufferers, it would benefit all of us, returning us to
a society based on face-to-face human interaction.
Dr James Rubin of King's College Institute of Psychiatry is
adamant EHS is not a genuine syndrome. "With most conditions, patients
don't necessarily know what's going on. But with electrosensitivity there's an
absolute certainty about the cause. Self-diagnosis is at the core of it."
He prefers the term "idiopathic environmental intolerances", or IEI,
which covers conditions with no obvious cause, like multiple chemical
sensitivity, sick building syndrome, food intolerances – even a physical
reaction to wind turbines. "The problem is, if you look for a coherent set
of symptoms, you are not going to find it. You even find that people's symptoms
change over time. Many have other intolerances in addition to the electrical
sensitivity."
Tim is intolerant to milk and gluten. He is also allergic to
wool, and cannot sleep in a room with a carpet. Michelle has no intolerances
but admits she is unusual in the community: "Most people do." She
made her diagnosis because she was familiar with EHS through her work. She is
familiar with Rubin's research and has written blogs condemning his methods:
"These stupid so-called provocation studies where they place a mobile in
your hand and ask if you feel unwell. And if you say yes, they go, ho-ho, the
phone wasn't switched on." These tests pay no attention to the way that
people are sensitised, or react to their sensitivity in different ways, she
believes.
Rubin is a bogeyman in the electrosensitive community thanks
to a 2008 paper that suggested the condition was psychosomatic. Yet he has also
undertaken a review of all the research – more than 50 provocation studies –
and found no evidence of sensitivity to telecoms radiation. He says, "The
suffering is very real – I don't doubt that – and I take it very seriously. But
we've spent millions on the research and the time comes when you have to say,
in the future the money would be better spent on looking for effective
treatments, rather than chasing a cause."
Professor Andrew Marino is less sceptical. "When people
say they feel unwell and trace that to a Wi-Fi signal or a phone, that is a
kind of experiment. It may not be well designed, they may not understand blinds
and double blinds, but if they are reasonable people, carefully noting what
they are suffering, we should take a look at that."
Marino was a first-year postgraduate in 1964 when he began
working with Dr Robert Becker. Once he and Becker began campaigning against
electricity pylons, their funding disappeared. Becker retired at the relatively
young age of 56. Today, Andrew Marino will not look to industry for research
funds. He has reviewed many of the same 50 papers on EHS as Rubin, concluding,
"It's easy to find nothing." The common denominator he identified in
the papers casting doubt on EHS is that they were funded by the
telecommunications industry.
EHS sufferers have criticised Rubin's research because it is
funded jointly by mobile phone companies and government. They believe this
shows direct bias. Marino's criticism is different. He recognises Rubin's money
was placed in a fund and administered by scientists separate from the industry.
Yet, he argues, the industry approves funding because statistical modelling of
large-scale studies averages out experiences and produces no clear-cut results.
Big business is happy to back risk studies, but they favour projects that
minimise risk: "You look at the statistics and see the way they design the
experiments and they have no ability to find anything."
Rubin's research is statistic-driven. If Rubin is a
pollster, then Marino is a canvasser. He believes vast overviews hide the way
people really feel. Marino chose to focus on a single sufferer, a female
doctor. His two-week study began by first discovering which wavelengths
affected her. Once her symptoms had subsided, Marino and his team began again,
using provocation studies of real and fake signals. Their results were
published as Electromagnetic Hypersensitivity: Evidence For A Novel
Neurological Syndrome.
Marino and Rubin have exchanged a series of letters about
the study in the Journal Of Neuroscience. If the research stands up, Marino's
syndrome is novel because it is unlike other kinds of hypersensitivity. In
truth, it depends upon singularity. Marino speaks urgently: "I'm not
interested in measuring the prevalence of the syndrome. I want to establish its
existence." In his view, humans – complex living organisms – are all
different. In the economy of our bodies, Marino says, "causes becomes
effects and effects becomes causes which become effects, and so on". It is
an endless and unpredictable cycle.
So should we all make radical lifestyle changes, like
cutting down our mobile phone use or getting rid of our Wi-Fi?
"Why?" Marino sounds perplexed.
"Because we might get sick."
Marino dismisses the idea. He may disagree vehemently with
Rubin, but he views EHS sufferers as outliers, far removed from the average
human experience and with few lessons for the rest of us. "Listen, I use
an ear bud with my phone, and I minimise use. I don't know if you'd call it
radical but I don't have acute reactions to anything. So there's nothing for me
to worry about."
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