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Wireless Networking Hardware

Group Wants Wi-Fi Banned, Citing Allergy 525

54mc writes "A small group in Santa Fe, New Mexico is claiming that the city is discriminating against them by having wireless networks in public buildings. How are these buildings discriminatory? Simple. These people are allergic to Wi-Fi. And they're suing the city." I've been trying to sue people for the streetlights that I'm allergic to as well.
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Group Wants Wi-Fi Banned, Citing Allergy

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  • Three words... (Score:5, Insightful)

    by msauve ( 701917 ) on Saturday May 24, 2008 @09:51AM (#23527278)
    "double blind test."

    Allergic?, yeah sure you are.
  • Insightfulness (Score:4, Insightful)

    by pacroon ( 846604 ) on Saturday May 24, 2008 @09:57AM (#23527314)
    I'm desperately trying to find something meaningful to say to this issue, that would rate me insightful. So I'm gonna go ahead and ponder over the fact, that their allergic reactions are probably an effect of solar gamma-radiation than it is your local Starbucks.
  • by Jeremy Erwin ( 2054 ) on Saturday May 24, 2008 @09:57AM (#23527322) Journal
    Phone mast allergy 'in the mind' [bbc.co.uk]

    However, when tests were carried out in which neither the experimenter or participant knew if the mast was on or off, the number of symptoms reported was not related to whether a signal was being emitted or not.
    Two of the 44 sensitive individuals correctly judged if it was on or off in all six tests, as did five out of 114 control participants.
    So, perhaps a few double blind tests are in order.
  • It's unamerican! (Score:2, Insightful)

    by youthoftoday ( 975074 ) on Saturday May 24, 2008 @10:01AM (#23527340) Homepage Journal
    From TFA:

    ... violation of the Americans with Disabilities Act.
    Does everything have to be patriotic over there? Even your disability laws?
  • by AaronLawrence ( 600990 ) * on Saturday May 24, 2008 @10:11AM (#23527404)
    Because many, many studies have been done on many variations of radio waves and their effect on humans and have all concluded there is no danger so long as the safety limits already set, are adhered too.

  • by Avian visitor ( 257765 ) on Saturday May 24, 2008 @10:13AM (#23527414) Homepage
    Everyone wants to have a mobile phone that works everywhere, broadband internet, cheap electricity in their homes and produce tons of garbage but they will go to streets with pitchforks if you want to build a cell tower, Wi-Fi access point, nuclear powerplant or waste disposal facility in their neighborhood.

    People got so used to having all the modern technology available to them that they simply forgot what makes such things possible.

    Allergic to Wi-Fi? Fine! I can understand that. I'll turn off my access point as soon as you get rid of your Wi-Fi and Bluetooth enabled computer, cell phone and your microwave oven.
  • by pla ( 258480 ) on Saturday May 24, 2008 @10:15AM (#23527426) Journal
    FTA: Arthur Firstenberg says he is highly sensitive to certain types of electric fields, including wireless Internet and cell phones. "I get chest pain and it doesn't go away right away," he said

    Well then, looks like you'd better move to the middle of nowhere, rather than trying to live in a fairly large city.

    Even If:
    1) A physiological basis existed for having an autoimmune response to RF,
    2) Only the 2.4GHz range of frequencies triggers it (since we literally live in a sea of RF, including from natural sources),
    3) The 9th circuit accepts "electrosensitivity" as a valid "disability", and
    4) The city backs down on this...

    Well, given all that - What do you plan to do about the 50,000 nonmunicipal WAPs in your area? The FAA, NOAA, and military radar installations scattered around the country? Or for that matter, the microwave ovens found in every home and restauraunt in the country?


    And even if you have a legitimate complaint - Welcome to the real world, where no one cares about your pitiful psychosomatic response to spoooooooky radio waves. Get a shrink, get used to chest pain, or move to Afghanistan.
  • by bcmm ( 768152 ) on Saturday May 24, 2008 @10:23AM (#23527474)
    Doesn't an MRI machine produce vibrations as well?

    Might these not be detectable subconciously before you are aware of them?
  • Yes (Score:3, Insightful)

    by argent ( 18001 ) <peter@slashdot . ... t a r o nga.com> on Saturday May 24, 2008 @10:31AM (#23527540) Homepage Journal
    Passing the cost of pollution back to polluters instead of letting it be carried by the commons would allow the market to solve the pollution problem. Let the invisible hand do the dirty work.
  • by MagdJTK ( 1275470 ) on Saturday May 24, 2008 @10:31AM (#23527546)

    And no one knows why cancer rates have increased so much in the last few years.

    We know full well why more people are getting cancer. Improvements in medicine have reduced the mortality rates of other diseases hugely and improvements in vacinations have vastly reduced the number of people who even get potentially deadly diseases like mumps and measles, so more people survive to get cancer.

    Put another way, if we shot everyone at the age of 40, I can guarantee that cancer rates would plummet. If we irradicated every other type of disease (including old age) then everyone would get cancer eventually.

  • by Hankapobe ( 1290722 ) on Saturday May 24, 2008 @10:34AM (#23527564)
    How much you want to bet they suddenly become allergic to tin foil and sue you too?

    That's when I come in with a special pill (Spuriousol [Placebo HCL]) and liner (Fiberal) for those tin foil hats. And I'll sell it for $$$!

    You see, the profit potential among those people is endless. Am I a bad person? You can't reason with people like that. They'll insist that there's "scientific evidence" (they got it from some "new age" type of magazine). So, I say, if they want to live in fantasy land, then why not take their money. It makes them happy, after all. Cosmetics companies do it - they give women hope that they'll be as beautiful as the model in the ad. Car companies do it - buy this expensive car and you too will be as cool and handsome as the model in the photo. And you need it to drive in today's traffic after all - nod nod wink wink.

    Supplement companies do it.

    All of these companies and more sell to folks who refuse to verify their claims and want to be deceived.

  • by Dipsomaniac ( 1102131 ) on Saturday May 24, 2008 @10:38AM (#23527588)
    Part of it isn't even that people are necessarily getting more cancer. Doctors are finding more cancer. More testing and better testing will have that effect.
  • Oh yes they are. (Score:2, Insightful)

    by conureman ( 748753 ) on Saturday May 24, 2008 @10:40AM (#23527608)
    Some of my old neighbors were like these people. The (very) few who weren't obese, looked anorexic.
  • by Moofie ( 22272 ) <lee AT ringofsaturn DOT com> on Saturday May 24, 2008 @10:45AM (#23527644) Homepage
    "dismisses this as crazy."

    Crazy? No. Unfortunate? Certainly. Hypochondria? Possibly. Time to do some experiments.

    It is unreasonable to assume that parts of the electromagnetic spectrum are dangerous absent empirical evidence of same. That's what "reasonable" means.
  • by Hankapobe ( 1290722 ) on Saturday May 24, 2008 @10:47AM (#23527658)
    An allergen is a nonparasitic antigen capable of stimulating a type-I hypersensitivity reaction in atopic individuals. From: Allergen [wikipedia.org]
  • Uh.. (Score:3, Insightful)

    by msauve ( 701917 ) on Saturday May 24, 2008 @10:47AM (#23527662)
    2 (on/off) ^6 (tests) = 64, so 1/64 would be expected to be correct with purely random guesses. I'm sure someone who knows statistics better than I will jump in, but 2/44 or 5/114 "correct" (even though better than chance) no doubt has little significance, given the small sample size.
  • by Chonnawonga ( 1025364 ) on Saturday May 24, 2008 @10:53AM (#23527702)
    No, they said "rates" have increased, not "numbers".
  • by hughk ( 248126 ) on Saturday May 24, 2008 @10:56AM (#23527726) Journal
    With an NMR machine, it is a very strong field, i.e., 1 Tesla or more. It is quite likely this will have some effect on you, and it has already been shown that the brain is sensitive to high magnetic fields.
  • by sarysa ( 1089739 ) on Saturday May 24, 2008 @10:57AM (#23527740)
    First they came for the bees, and I did not speak out because I was not a bee.
    Then they came for the electro-sensitive, and I did not speak out because I was not electro-sensitive.
    Then they came for the ethernet cables, and I did not speak out because I stopped using ethernet cables.
    Then they came for me, and I enjoyed worldwide wireless coverage on my laptop. Woohoo!
  • by Chonnawonga ( 1025364 ) on Saturday May 24, 2008 @10:57AM (#23527746)
    No doubt that's a large part of it. But what about the fact that over the last few decades, we have been exposing ourselves to huge numbers of chemicals on a daily basis, the long-term health effects of which are often unknown? Do you really know what's in that fabric softener you've been putting on your clothes? What else is happening when you take a deep breath of that "new car smell"? I'm always a little skeptical when I watch the woman in the commercial sniffing up the aerosol Febreeze she's plastering her house with.

    This may seem paranoid, but I choose to be both skeptical and cautious until we have proper, long-term studies of each and every chemical in these consumer products, and of what they do to us in combination.

  • by moderatorrater ( 1095745 ) on Saturday May 24, 2008 @10:59AM (#23527762)
    To reiterate what an earlier poster said, there have been studies, and none have shown this to be a real issue.

    Furthermore, it's not up to the people who want to disprove these people to provide the evidence, it's up to them to provide the evidence, which I guarantee they won't. They'll have some pseudo-scientist walk in there, he'll talk about the effects that these poor souls have to live through constantly, and then go home and continue writing on his webpage about how science has been stealing the future from us by suppressing the discovery of his perpetual motion machine!

    And this would be fine as long as judges and juries knew how to read science and recognize its value compared to pseudo science, but most people can't. The patent office, at least as of a few years ago, patented multiple perpetual motion machines every year, either because they didn't read the application or because they didn't know that it was physically impossible. So, as long as they can put some crackpot up there who knows enough science-sounding gibberish to fool someone who doesn't know better, they actually have a chance of winning.

    Is it possible that these people are actually allergic to wifi signals? Absolutely. It wouldn't even be a contender for strangest thing ever. The reason there's such a backlash against it is because there have been so many times that people have made similar allegations and ignored, lied, and suppressed actual science showing that they were wrong. Tempers are already flared over this issue, and it looks like these people are going to do the exact same thing that's been done before.
  • by MrNaz ( 730548 ) * on Saturday May 24, 2008 @11:12AM (#23527866) Homepage
    Easy. The adversarial legal system: We find out who can afford to hire a bigger team of lawyers.
  • Re:Three words... (Score:3, Insightful)

    by ScreamingCactus ( 1230848 ) on Saturday May 24, 2008 @11:18AM (#23527936)
    Of course they are allergic. They're allergic to all frequencies in the 2.4 - 5GHz range, 800 - 900 and 1800 - 1900 MHz, and excluding all others (ie, the aren't allergic to satellite radio, UHF TV, or GPS signals. Only cellphones and wi-fi. Also, they are miraculously not affected by the 2.45 GHz given off by their microwaves.
  • Re:Hay fever (Score:4, Insightful)

    by Sancho ( 17056 ) * on Saturday May 24, 2008 @11:18AM (#23527940) Homepage
    That's the difference between the city doing something that sparks an allergic reaction and a private individual doing the same. I can choose to avoid going near houses which have allergen-flowering plants. I can't avoid going to city hall if I need to do something there. I have to renew my license periodically (and only every other year can you do it online, here), for example.
  • Young Sebastian (Score:2, Insightful)

    by tor528 ( 896250 ) on Saturday May 24, 2008 @11:21AM (#23527968) Homepage
    I'm concerned about the fact that children aren't mentioned once in this article. You would think that these grownups who are allergic to wi-fi would also mention that their children complain about the effects of wi-fi. Perhaps the wi-fi has already killed off all of the children?
  • by emilper ( 826945 ) on Saturday May 24, 2008 @11:31AM (#23528066)

    huge numbers of chemicals

    If you have a friend that is chemist, ask him what is in the smoke resulting from burning wood. You'll stop talking about the "dangerous chemicals" we use nowadays and start loving your gas or electric heater ...

  • Re:Three words... (Score:2, Insightful)

    by kd4zqe ( 587495 ) on Saturday May 24, 2008 @11:46AM (#23528212)
    Yeah... I was looking at the video of his "shielded" house and automobile, and wondered to myself if he had a microwave oven. I imagine more scatter 2.4gHz radiation is given off by a 500w mini microwave than that of a full power 500mw access point. If he's ever made a bag of popcorn, I say case dismissed.

    Also, every telephone in his house better have a bloody cord. I hope the the state's lawyers look into that too. I hope their laziness and desire for convenience tanks their suit.

    "GO WEAR YOUR TINFOIL HAT AND LEAVE MY WiFi ALONE!"

    (on a side observation in no way related to my opinion above, the two interviewed seem to be rather flamboyant hippie types, don't they? They also appear to look almost exactly alike. Creepy...)
  • by NIckGorton ( 974753 ) * on Saturday May 24, 2008 @11:48AM (#23528250)
    Pattern matching is a wonderful thing, and you are correct that it is a function of our intelligence and a product of evolution (for example avoiding eating things that make us sick.) However something else that developed out of our intelligence was logic and the ability to evaluate empirical evidence.

    Last Tuesday I went to a Sacramento Kings game. The Kings were ahead one run and my boyfriend left to use the restroom. As soon as I put his glove on (as a defense against the crapload of fouls they were hitting at us) the other team scored two runs. When he left again to get a beer, I again put on his glove and the other team got another run. Pattern matching (and superstition) would lead me to believe that in future I should not put BFs glove on if he leaves, because the Kings will lose the game. However, logic and a basic knowledge of the physical universe tells me that this pattern is a false one.

    In this case the individuals in TFA have again falsely matched a pattern. They certainly have symptoms from their illness (which is a type of panic attack, which can give quite impressive and scary symptoms.) However, instead of accepting the reality that their expectation of becoming ill on exposure to X is a self-fulfilling prophesy and accepting therapy aimed at breaking that false association, they insist that Wi-Fi (or chemicals or whatever) is causing their symptoms in a manner unrelated to their expectation of becoming ill. Medicine and society does them (and others with purported multiple chemical sensitivity) no help by continuing to feed their fears and psychopathology.

    We are designed to match patterns, but we don't have to be ruled by these when they are in error. I don't think that my wearing BFs glove has any more power to influence the outcome of a Sacramento Kings game than Wi-Fi causes these people any serious ailment outside of panic attacks. Show me a reason that these are related, or do a prospective double blind or good quality epidemiological study showing a link and I might believe you. That study has been done to people with 'MCS' and 'sensitivity' to EM radiation and it shows their is no effect from the purported causative agents. We haven't done it with the Kings, but if you buy me a set of season tickets, I will be happy to undertake it for you.
  • by init100 ( 915886 ) on Saturday May 24, 2008 @11:51AM (#23528278)

    Do you know how many natural toxins are present in vegetables?

    This reminds me of a young woman who claimed that marijuana can't be dangerous since it comes from a plant. She thought that only humans can create poisonous substances.

  • Re:Cage 'em (Score:3, Insightful)

    by noidentity ( 188756 ) on Saturday May 24, 2008 @11:56AM (#23528324)

    I say we quarantine them all in a nice Faraday Cage.

    Except that they probably don't know it blocks radio waves, so they'll still get their allergy while inside it with a WiFi transmitter visibly nearby and on (or at leasty as far as the sufferer can tell).

  • by Theovon ( 109752 ) on Saturday May 24, 2008 @12:10PM (#23528466)
    There are people who really do have allergies and food sensitivities and such. Those people need to be careful about what they eat and expose themselves to. But when crackpots like this enter the fray, they make trouble for us, because they makes us all look like crackpots. It's no different from over-diagnosing ADHD. There are people who really have it (although I understand, interestingly enough, that some cases are helped by dietary adjustments). But then there are the countless more who just have discipline problems; they need a smack in the butt, not Ritalin.

    That all being said, there are some hypotheses that humans can be affected by EM radiation. And maybe it's not good for us. I mean, being exposed to high levels of microwaves can cook you, so I'm sure low-levels aren't entirely risk free. Then there are the proposed links between power lines and leucemia. It's all worth investigating... with a critical scientific eye. But calling it an ALLERGY is just stupid and betrays a total lack of understanding what an allergic reaction is (an immune reaction to a foreign protein).

  • Re:that's not all (Score:5, Insightful)

    by NIckGorton ( 974753 ) * on Saturday May 24, 2008 @12:10PM (#23528468)

    nobody owes you a perfect environment,
    No, but we have decided as a civilized society that we will allow people with disabilities reasonable accommodations so that they can fully participate in society. We require places of public accommodation to have wheelchair access for a small minority of people who need it. We require employers to provide special assistance to employees who with accommodations can do the work. A blind programmer might require special equipment and programs that will cost his employer extra. However as a civilized society we require that.

    These are good things and show that we have evolved past the point in society where we would leave people with disabilities to suffer or die. Leaving nature to 'trim the unfit out' as you suggest borders on repulsive depending on your definition of 'trim out'.

    However that isn't the reason that this request should be denied. It should first and foremost be denied because there is no such thing as an allergy to Wi-Fi. I can't say that I have a disease where I am required to get a massage, a steak, and get laid twice a day or I will die.... and expect society to provide for this me. Because such a disease does not exist.

    Secondly though, this approaches the point where even if they had a true allergy, it would not be a reasonable accommodation. A blind person can expect to be allowed a fair chance to be a programmer, but not an airline pilot. When there is a significant detriment to enough people, accommodations cease to be reasonable. Banning public Wi-Fi would have a serious detriment to some segments of the population and therefore might not be a reasonable accommodation.
  • by bigtomrodney ( 993427 ) * on Saturday May 24, 2008 @12:15PM (#23528512)
    Absolutely agree. The lack of general science knowledge outside of science students (and hey sometimes including science students) really make things hard for those in the know.

    You'll hear your mother or someone from the older generation talk about the dangers of chemicals. What a completely abstract and misinformed outlook to have. What is a chemical? EVERYTHING. Water is a chemical. Sugar is a chemical. And of course the examples of toxic things in nature posted above.

    I know that may sound pedantic in this forum but this is a point that needs to be made clearer to the 'Think of the children' brigade. I am all for controlling substances that are generally harmful...who isn't...but let's stop running around like headless chicken and get the job done the right way without scaremongering, gossip and chinese whispers.
  • by conureman ( 748753 ) on Saturday May 24, 2008 @12:29PM (#23528684)
    "However something else that developed out of our intelligence was logic and the ability for a few people to evaluate empirical evidence."

    Fixed that.

    IMHO, the ability of the logical mind to override the limbic brain is debatable. Here in this part of the country it is considered unpatriotic to try.
  • by Woldry ( 928749 ) on Saturday May 24, 2008 @12:48PM (#23528872) Journal
    Offer her a hemlock and oleander salad with amanita mushrooms and a lovely mistletoe-berry vinaigrette.
  • Re:Three words... (Score:3, Insightful)

    by Lord Apathy ( 584315 ) on Saturday May 24, 2008 @12:58PM (#23529026)

    Because there is no -1, Full of Shit.

  • by SEWilco ( 27983 ) on Saturday May 24, 2008 @01:00PM (#23529040) Journal

    on the basis of a telephone survey ... have left their jobs because of electromagnetic pollution in the workplace.

    But they're still able to answer an electromagnetic telephone, hold the electromagnetic speaker next to their head, and answer a telephone survey.

    Shouldn't this information be on my favorite 50,000 watt radio station or TV station?

  • by nog_lorp ( 896553 ) on Saturday May 24, 2008 @01:01PM (#23529048)
    While it always bugs me when people talk about chemicals and how scary they are, GP has a point. Potatoes, castor beans, the sun... we HAVE long term data on all those things. People have been eating potatoes and beans and being exposed to the sun since prehistory. We can look at disease data for different populations that have these foods as staples.

    We do not, on the other hand, have any data for synthetics with no other presence in nature. We know Wild Almonds can kill you because they've been around forever and documented. Why should we have MORE faith in substances for which we have NO historical background information?
  • Re:Uh.. (Score:4, Insightful)

    by Just Some Guy ( 3352 ) <kirk+slashdot@strauser.com> on Saturday May 24, 2008 @01:04PM (#23529084) Homepage Journal

    In other words of the people who claimed to be sensitive, only 4.5% correctly identified when the mast was on in all 6 tries. Meanwhile in the control group - the group of people who do not claim to be sensitive - 4.3% correctly identified when the mast was on in all 6 tries.

    Furthermore, there are only 64 possibly outcomes of a series of 6 binary events. I'm not a stats guy (as my college prof will vouch), but it seems like pure dumb luck will get you 1:64 people picking all six correctly (and the same ratio picking all six incorrectly) without even trying. 2:44 and 5:144 are just about twice the "dumb luck" number. Isn't that within the error bar for such a small sample?

  • Re:Three words... (Score:1, Insightful)

    by Anonymous Coward on Saturday May 24, 2008 @01:10PM (#23529188)
    Why is my post marked as flamebait? Can't the mods read?

    I think you got marked as flamebait because you are citing microwave radiation studies in a discussion about WiFi. Granted that's still a bad mod, but if your post had been marked offtopic it might be fair (although still heavy handed). The only other reason I could see for the negative mod is your resurrection of the cellphone = brain cancer thing. That argument has been going on (with respected studies on both sides) for sooooo long that I guess someone with mod points just had a bad reaction to it.
  • Re:Three words... (Score:4, Insightful)

    by lc_overlord ( 563906 ) on Saturday May 24, 2008 @01:38PM (#23529456) Homepage
    It's been done already a few times in Sweden (being it's usual overly sensitive, rational and anal retentive self) against this and other various electric fields, even ones at several magnitudes above recommended safe levels.
    You know what they found, nada, nothing, zilch, apparently they only have the reaction if they know about it.

    I recommend putting a sticker on all wifi products that says "new allergy free design".
    There is nothing quite like an ineffective solution to an nonexistant problem.
  • by JLF65 ( 888379 ) on Saturday May 24, 2008 @01:44PM (#23529500)
    You mean choose the "fresh" fruit with all its diseases and bugs and parasites, or the "treated" fruit with some artificial chemicals that may or may not be good for you after 50 years of eating said fruit to the exclusion of all else. Hmm... pass the chemically treated fruit this way.
  • Re:Not really. (Score:3, Insightful)

    by Viol8 ( 599362 ) on Saturday May 24, 2008 @02:08PM (#23529704) Homepage
    Don't act dumb - you know perfectly well I was talking about day to day natural toxins that would could be fatal if the body didn't quickly metabolise them to something safe and excrete them - alcohol for example. Last time I looked I'm not generally surrounded by cynanide vapours or vapours from hemlock or poisonous toadstools. I am however surrounded by a cocktail of man made organics in the air.
  • by bigtomrodney ( 993427 ) * on Saturday May 24, 2008 @02:24PM (#23529854)

    Make an effort to parse it, they mean man-made chemicals.
    Oh I parse it just fine, the point I'm trying to make is that what innocently and with good intentions started out to mean man-made chemicals has unfortunately tarnished the word chemical. You talk about chemicals in the body and they'll shy away as if its a bad thing - though you may be talking about haemoglobin. You will hear people talking who have missed the point that carbon dioxide/monoxide levels are bad and instead choose to believe that carbon is one of the evils of the world and comes from exhaust pipes. Never mind that we are all carbon based ourselves, along with most of our diet.

    Sure I understand but the problem now is that they don't understand yet are the ones doing the crusading.
  • by Fritzed ( 634646 ) <Fritzed@gmaBOYSENil.com minus berry> on Saturday May 24, 2008 @03:19PM (#23530358) Homepage
    If that is true, then isn't our responsibility to expose ourselves to as many new toxins as possible for the sake of our children?
  • by PunkOfLinux ( 870955 ) <mewshi@mewshi.com> on Saturday May 24, 2008 @03:28PM (#23530424) Homepage
    Who wants to bet that these people have a 2.4GHz cordless phone in their home? That operates on almost the EXACT same frequency as wifi. If they're not 'allergic' to those, they're not allergic to wi-fi. Chances are, these are just some gullible idiots who heard that wi-fi 'emits radiation'. If they're that afraid of the little bit of radiation emitted by a wireless router, then they should be more afraid of a microwave and tv.
  • by rossifer ( 581396 ) on Saturday May 24, 2008 @03:47PM (#23530566) Journal

    Personally, I have all kinds of allergies to detergents, and other artificial things in the environment, and it seems unfair to me that everyone dismisses this as crazy.
    Not knowing anything about you, I speculate that there are three possibilities here: extreme sensitivity, subclinical allergies, and psychosomatic allergies.

    Subclinical allergies: There are some quacks who do a bunch of skin-prick tests and claim that the reactions to small amounts of substances injected into your dermis can reveal not only skin allergies, but respiratory and food allergies too! If their tests reveal an allergy to dairy, but you love milk, cheese, yogurt, and ice cream and have never had a reaction, your allergy is subclinical and is even more dangerous. Presumably more dangerous to their fees because you might realize that there's no way to tell if your lungs or digestive tract are sensitized to a substance by examining the skin on your arm or back.

    On subclinical allergies: if you don't have a proximal negative reaction to the substance, you're not allergic. Anyone telling you otherwise is trying to make money from you. Check to see if their hand is in your pocket.

    Extreme sensitivity: The reaction is real, the substance list is long, and the risk to your person is very high. You carry epi-pens because of your risk level. You've used epi-pens over the last year because of a serious reaction to something.

    Psychosomatic allergies: A lot of people have physical reactions to their anxieties. Hives are a very real allergic response to stress. Just stress. To add to that, there are plenty of people who are just really high strung and who are worried about a lot of things, whether from OCD or simply thriving while complaining. Combine the two and you've got someone who has a true allergic reaction to the strangest things, often related to their own fears about cleanliness, hygene, toxins, etc. But that allergic pathway involves the conscious mind of the allergic person.

    Based on your observation that you have many reactions to synthetic substances, I would first suspect this is the cause of your reactions. Most double-blind tests of sensitivity to synthetics reveals that people react to being told that something is synthetic, and not on whether it actually is synthetic. Which means that their allergic response is an anxiety response.

    It's a bit of a pain to test, but not actually that bad if you really want to know. You'll need a friend, your washing machine (that has presumably only used natural detergents), someone else's washing machine, a synthetic detergent and a natural soap that you can't tell apart by smell, and a bunch of shirts. Put a number on each shirt's tag. Your friend should randomly take half the shirts, write down the numbers, and wash them with natural soap in your washing machine. Take other half of the shirts, write down the numbers, and wash with synthetic detergent in the other washing machine. Dry and fold all of the shirts, individually wrap them in paper, keep them separate. Now you go and ask for two shirts. You may get two natural, two synthetic, or one of each. So long as your friend is mixing it up and not telling you. Wear the two shirts, write down if you have a reaction, go get two more. Don't be wearing any of these shirts when you meet the friend to pick up two more, and don't tell your friend the results until you've worn all of the shirts. Now compare the list of shirts that you reacted to with the list of shirts washed in the synthetic detergent. If you normally get a reaction within minutes, this will be a quick test. If it normally takes a day or more, it could take several weeks.

    That's a double-blind test and is basically the only way to tell if the response is psychosomatic or is based on an actual contact sensitivity. I strongly suspect that you'll discover you're really anxious about natural vs. synthetic and that's causing your skin to react.
  • by LaskoVortex ( 1153471 ) on Saturday May 24, 2008 @10:11PM (#23533192)

    This reminds me of a young woman who claimed that marijuana can't be dangerous since it comes from a plant.

    This reminds me of the government who claims its bad for you despite the fact that it forbids research on the topic. Yes, ignorance, stupid beliefs, and blind gullibility are all around us.

  • by Anonymous Coward on Sunday May 25, 2008 @02:25AM (#23534079)
    What we have determined is that administering .05 cc of chlorhexidine 4 times daily to a cohort of laboratory mice will, in time, produce a paper.

Never test for an error condition you don't know how to handle. -- Steinbach

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