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ELECTROSENSITIVTY SERIES: Arrhythmia Connection with Electrosmog?

The attached video by Dr. Magda Havas, Professor of Environmental and Resource Studies at Trent University, Canada, presents evidence validating electrohypersensitivity, specifically the impact of electromagnetic radiation from portable phones on the heart.


Havas’ 25-person study, which took place in Boulder and Golden, CO in October 2008, is part of a 100-person study examining the heart’s reactivity to microwave radiation emitted by common cordless phones. This is the first time such striking effects from microwave radiation being emitted by wireless phones has been documented scientifically in a double blind study and it is important information for health practitioners to know.


Patients today experiencing electrohypersensitivity symptoms, such as effects on the heart, are commonly put on drugs for other conditions with similar symptoms, instead of being taught how to create an electromagnetically clean environment to eliminate symptoms.

Symptoms of electrohypersensitivity include headaches, difficulty concentrating, insomnia, heart irregularities and much more. (See EHS Quiz at www.magdahavas.com or electrohypersensitivity questionnaire in “Public Health SOS: The Shadow Side of the Wireless Revolution” at http://sn.im/szxq8.)

Radiation emitted from DECT portable phones is the same microwave radiation as emitted by cell phones. Havas’ study adds to the growing interest in the health effects of cell phones, broadening the focus beyond cell phones’ association with brain tumors to their effect on other systems, including the heart.

In the image below, Subject B experienced an increase in heart rate on exposure to a nearby portable phone. The heart rate immediately returned to the baseline after the cordless phone was unplugged.



Havas’ study on heart rate variability was blinded, which means that the volunteers did not know when the phone was on or off. Most of the volunteers did not respond to the exposure, but those who did respond experienced arrhythmia (irregular beats of the heart) and/or tachycardia (rapid heart rate). These symptoms were often accompanied by feelings of anxiety.

Havas states, “While not everyone who is electrically sensitive responds in this manner, those who do will have difficulty being in environments where microwave radiation is present, which is virtually everywhere in our modern, wireless culture.” She adds, “Cordless phones and cell phones as well as wireless computers and wi-fi networks generate this form of microwave radiation.”

Additional symptoms of EHS include headaches, fatigue, difficulty concentrating, poor short-term memory, difficulty sleeping, skin problems, tinnitus, nausea, and dizziness. Many of these symptoms are subjective and difficult to measure.

Havas’ study heralds the ability of health practitioners to determine if cardiac irregularities might be triggered by electromagnetic radiation before resorting to invasive or chemical symptom-suppressing cardiac therapeutics. She and co-investigator Jeff Marrongelle, DC of Schuylkill Haven, PA recently presented the findings at a conference of the American Holistic Medical Association.

Dr. Havas’s is a world-renowned expert in electromagnetic fields. Her current research is concerned with the biological effects of electromagnetic pollution including radio frequency radiation, electromagnetic fields, dirty electricity and ground current. She is co-author, with Camilla Rees, of the new book, “Public Health SOS: The Shadow Side of the Wireless Revolution” (Amazon: http://sn.im/szxq8).