UK: Woman says Wi-Fi allergy killed her daughter

The following article is extremely disturbing, because a teenaged girl in the United Kingdom, subjected to wifi at her school, and with apparent, reported signs of electrohypersensitivity to rf radiation is now dead – a suicide. She was alleged to have been forced to sit near routers that made her repeatedly sick in school. With no options presented by her school district, according to her mother, she tragically took her own life. As one who suffers from such an “allergy”, I can understand how impossible the situation must have seemed to this young girl, whose only choice would  have been to find another school without wifi (nearly impossible) or be home-schooled. Without sympathy from physicians and the school district, trying to receive an education while being in a torturous environment, she sadly gave up. I wish I could have spoken with this mother about alternate emergency options that would have had to be implemented, to remove her daughter from the source of torture, as it truly is impossible to ignore, it is so physically uncomfortable for some people – and I am definitely one of these, also.

My heart goes out to the family, and I ask that any others suffering from wifi exposure in schools or workplaces not make such a dire choice, but find any and all ways to remove oneself from the wifi environment, seeking legal help if necessary, while urgently demanding that the school or workplace remove the wifi or provide a non-wifi environment for sensitive individuals. The inhumanity of forcing people who are sensitive to rf radiation (and the rest who are at risk of harm but can’t feel it) to forced exposure to strong (or any) wifi is unconscionable. Taking all measures to avoid the trigger to the allergy and remaining here to fight this problem is the solution.  This is a very real problem in our schools, globally.

Read what a renowned researcher and oncologist says about school wifi. Renowned Swedish Oncologist & WHO Researcher Warns About School Wi-Fi.

Read how researchers have found a possible means to screen those with electrohypersensitivity to rf radiation through a blood panel, with the discovery of genetic factors that cause the illness. Medical Screening of EHS Patients – A Scientific Paper

More on School Wifi and Wifi Health Alerts

(S. Brinchman, Director, CEP)

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Woman says Wi-Fi allergy killed her daughter

By Katie Dowd

San Francisco Gate, San Francisco, CA

Published 11:41 am, Tuesday, December 1, 2015

A mother in England is claiming a crippling allergy to Wi-Fi exacerbated by school routers compelled her 15-year-old daughter to end her life.

Jenny Fry committed suicide earlier this year, and her mother Debra says she left behind letters saying “she couldn’t cope with her allergies from wifi anymore.” Fry says her daughter suffered from electro-hypersensitivity (EHS), a condition that made Jenny tired and gave her headaches and bladder problems.

The World Health Organization issued a report on EHS in 2005 that said: “EHS is characterized by a variety of non-specific symptoms that differ from individual to individual. The symptoms are certainly real and can vary widely in their severity … EHS has no clear diagnostic criteria and there is no scientific basis to link EHS symptoms to EMF exposure.

“Further, EHS is not a medical diagnosis, nor is it clear that it represents a single medical problem.”

Debra Fry alleged at an inquest that her daughter’s school was made aware of her condition and did nothing to help her. Her mother says that Jenny was seated near routers and would often have to disappear from the classroom to find “unused classrooms” where she could work. The school punished her with detention for leaving the classroom, her mother claims.

“As soon as Jenny walked away from a router she felt instantly better so she was almost hunting out areas of the school which weren’t covered by Wi-Fi just to do her work,” Fry told the Telegraph. “I remember saying to the school ‘if someone had a peanut allergy you wouldn’t make them work surrounded by peanuts’.”

Oxfordshire coroner Darren Salter said there were no medical notes proving that Jenny was diagnosed with EHS, and Jenny’s school says its Wi-Fi routers were up to code.

There is a legal precedent for winning damages from Wi-Fi allergies. In August, a French court awarded a woman $32,000 after she said she was forced to move out of the city to escape the constant wireless emissions.

England’s public health department, however, argues there is no evidence Wi-Fi exposure causes “acute symptoms.” Jenny Fry’s family has started a campaign to raise awareness for EHS and seeks to change the use of routers in schools.

 

 

“Just because Wi-Fi is new and all around us doesn’t mean it is safe,” Debra Fry said. “Wi-Fi and children do not mix. Much more research needs to be done into this because I believe that Wi-Fi killed my daughter.”

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