Woman blames Wi-Fi allergy for suicide of daughter

    Briton Debra Fry is confident that her daughter was killed by a “Wi-Fi allergy,” and accuses the school of not protecting the children from the physical effects of wireless data technology.

    A fifteen-year-old schoolgirl was found dead on July 11, 2015 near her house after she sent a message to her friend that she did not want to go to school and intended to kill herself.

    Investigators found that the girl was organized, intelligent, but her life became unbearable due to the long-term symptoms of the ailment, called "electromagnetic hypersensitivity" - an "allergy" to electromagnetic radiation. Her mother said that the girl suffered from fatigue, headaches and problems with the bladder due to the presence of wireless Internet in her school.

    According to Debra Fry, her daughter Jenny began to show symptoms of "electromagnetic hypersensitivity" in November 2012. The closer the girl was to the router, the worse she felt. “Jenny started to get sick, like me. I conducted a study and found out how Wi-Fi can be dangerous, so I removed it from home. We both felt good at home, but at school, Jenny fell into Wi-Fi coverage again, ”says Debra.

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    Jenny fry

    School Wi-Fi


    Jenny Fry constantly left the classroom and was looking for another place where she would not feel the influence of wireless networks. She took her homework seriously, her mother says . “I brought a huge amount of information to the school principal, Simon Duffy, but he said that he could find as much data that Wi-Fi is safe. I argued with the teachers, telling them about Jenny’s allergy to Wi-Fi, and that she shouldn’t be kept in rooms where she feels unwell.

    According to her mother, the girl was looking for empty classes at school, wherever she felt the effects of radiation, and she did her homework: “I remember saying at school:“ If someone was allergic to peanuts, you would not force him work surrounded by this peanut. "" Debra is convinced that Wi-Fi is not safe: “A lot of research needs to be done because I believe that Wi-Fi killed my daughter.”

    According to the investigation, the girl thought about suicide back in 2014 after the death of her close friend. Now the Jenny family is trying to pay attention to the problem of electromagnetic radiation. They hope to permanently remove wireless routers from schools. “Jenny died after screaming for help. She wrote to her friend that she was going to die, and told where she was at that moment. But if she really intended to kill herself, then she would hardly have said where she was. Unfortunately, her friend didn’t have a phone nearby, so she saw the message too late, ”says Debra.

    The coroner did not include electromagnetic hypersensitivity in the report of the deceased girl, because he did not have access to medical records proving that Jenny had this disease. It is not known exactly whether Jenny went through a complete examination of the body, or whether her mother Debra Fry diagnosed the girl based on information found on the Internet about the dangers of Wi-Fi routers.

    Is electromagnetic hypersensitivity real?


    A 2005 report by the World Health Organization describes electromagnetic hypersensitivity: “EHF is characterized by a variety of nonspecific symptoms that differ in each person. Symptoms are undoubtedly real and vary widely in severity. Despite the causes of the disease, EHC can make a person incapable of work. ”

    WHO also notes that there are no criteria for diagnosing an ailment, nor a scientific basis linking the symptoms of electromagnetic hypersensitivity with the influence of electromagnetic radiation.

    In 2011, “allergy to Wi-Fi” in America became mass: Doctors claimed that people who were often far from technology came to them complaining about the harmful effects of Wi-Fi and other wireless technologies on their health. Symptoms include migraine, partial blindness, a cold, joint pain.

    The Americans began to escape in the town of Green Bank - almost one hundred and fifty people who were the first to move to this city noted improved health. This city does not have Wi-Fi, because next to it is the world's largest full-circle parabolic radio telescope as of June 2015. On the territory of 33 thousand square kilometers, any interference is unacceptable. It is strange that people began to flee from electromagnetic radiation near the world's largest radio telescope.

    In August 2015, the Frenchwoman receiveddisability allowance of 800 euros due to “allergy to gadgets” . She claimed that she was allergic to electromagnetic radiation. A court in the city of Toulouse awarded her a disability pension, but refused to acknowledge the existence of the disease itself.

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