Worried families ditch their Wi-Fi after watchdog voices health concerns 


By Geoffrey Lean and Alex Hanks 


Published: 03 June 2007 


http://news.independent.co.uk/health/article2609317.ece

Schools and families are rushing to remove Wi-Fi systems after the Government's 
chief health protection watchdog voiced concerns over their safety. 

Sir William Stewart's call for a "timely" review of the possible effects of the 
technology - originally reported by The Independent on Sunday in April and 
featured by the BBC's Panorama programme last month - has led to an 
unprecedented reaction from the public, according to one large dealer.

The London-based Scooter Computer call-out service said last week that it had 
received hundreds of calls recently.

Will Foot, for the company, said: "I have never seen such a reaction. It's 
completely out of the blue. More than 50 per cent of inquiries were from people 
worried about Wi-Fi access." He said that the company had already removed 25 
systems.

Nicola Hart, of Dartmouth Park in north London, was so concerned about the 
radiation emitted from the systems that she removed Wi-Fi from her home, and 
persuaded her neighbours and her daughter's school to do the same.

She said last night: "We put the system in about four months ago because my 
17-year-old son wanted to have access to the internet at the same time as us. I 
did not really think about any effects it might have."

While it was in, she said, she suffered "a lot of funny symptoms" which she 
thought were due to "an early menopause". But once she had the system removed 
she began sleeping and feeling better.

Her neighbours followed suit, then she approached her six-year-old daughter's 
school, the Trevor-Roberts School in Belsize Park, which also agreed to remove 
its system.

"A lot of the parents were very pleased," she says, "and a lot of my friends 
are very keen to have it taken out of their children's schools."

Sinead Griffiths, a researcher from Walthamstow, north-east London, also had 
Wi-Fi removed from her home. She says: "There is not enough information 
available on the subject. I don't want to take any risks. You just don't know 
what all this technology in the home is doing to us." She said her main motive 
had been to protect her children, but that she had suffered from headaches and 
lethargy.

The Independent's Green Goddess columnist Julia Stephenson reported last week 
that she too had disconnected her Wi-Fi, on the advice of her naturopath.

Sir William - the chairman of the Health Protection Agency and a former Chief 
Scientific Adviser to the Government - has chaired two inquiries into the 
effects of mobile phones and their masts. He warned against dangers from them 
and made safety recommendations, but was largely ignored by ministers.

In the past 18 months alone, 1.6 million Wi-Fi terminals have been sold in 
Britain for use in homes, offices, and a host of other buildings. By some 
estimates half of all primary schools, and four-fifths of all secondary 
schools, have installed them.

Further browsing: Sir William Stewart's first 2000 report can be read at 
iegmp.org.uk 


________________________________

From: [EMAIL PROTECTED] on behalf of Christoph Reuss
Sent: Wed 6/6/2007 5:32 PM
To: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Subject: [Futurework] WiFi radiation controversy




An interesting BBC documentary on the WiFi radiation controversy:

http://video.google.com/videoplay?docid=1025790239866512946&hl=en-GB

(skip forward to 02:46)



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