EHS victim: Dangerous doses of radiation
From:
"Sylvie"
Sent: Wednesday, May 21, 2008 3:36 AM
why
we don't meet people ..."not because of the
cinema screen,
but because of humans with their mobile phones
http://www.larochesuryon.maville.com/Sa-vie-plombee-par-le-mercure-et-les-ondes-P-/re/actudet/actu_loc-633091------_actu.html
His life weighed down by mercury and waves
With an
analyzer, Jean-Jacques Villemot measure
frequencies radiating
near his home in La
Roche-sur-Yon. Three mobile transmitters are
nearby.
In hours of high school exit Kastler, the camera
panics.
:
Portrait. The Yonnais Jean-Jacques Villemot suffers
from
allergy to the airwaves électromagnétiques.Pour
"survive", he deleted TV, computer, laptop, etc.. And
dream of nesting in a shack.
He removed his dental amalgam.
Fifteen. An operation
yet high-risk, "because the machine
heats the mixture,
and vapours containing mercury emerge.
"Jean-Jacques
Villemot, 49 years, however, to extract what
the mine,
mercury. If he could, he would "re-vaccinated."
To
evacuate his body thiomersal, a preservative present
in
some vaccines, and also containing mercury. For it
has now become
certainty, it is poisoned with heavy
metals.
"As if
my body was antenna"
An ideal terrain for
electromagnetic waves, including
our home environment, from
simple coffee in portable,
and outside is loaded, causing
hyperallergie. "With
heavy metals in my body is a bit like
if my body was
antenna, he says. Problem, these metals disturb my
cells. "A widespread and chronic disorder, with its
attendant symptoms recurring," big shots pumps,
nausea,
dizziness, chest tightness, "and so on.
Jean-Jacques
Villemot has for a long time before
putting his finger on the
source of these evils that
have brought KO and off course on the
social plan (it
is currently a work stoppage).
Portable,
TV, computer banned
It is an article published in a
specialist journal
that has provided the information. The title
of the
article was waves and health. The author highlighted
the
dangerous and intimate connections between the
environment
polluted by the waves and failing health.
Because despite
Professor Dominique Belpomme, which
launched a pad in the fed
some years ago with a
resounding pound (1), France is still in
the Stone Age
in what the Anglo-Saxons call "environmental
medicine"
.
Once acquired certainty (after medical
examinations)
on the origin of its ills, Jean-Jacques Villemot
has
reinvented his life, the risk of privacy, even to
marginalize, and sometimes move at best for a
hypochondriac
At worst for an original fleeing today's
world and progress,
"while I am not against some tools
have a real utility."
At home, he began by s'aménager
a nest, a little cut off
from the rest of the family.
A strategy of avoidance. No
television or computer, no
lamp but a candle to read the vigil.
On the outside,
he also makes the household. His stepmother 60
replete with technology, he bartered
without regret for an
old car. Her children are also
asked to turn off the laptop at
home.
Symptoms disappeared
The cinema, no way, "not
because of the screen, but
because in the room, some on their
mobile phones
paused." In short, he established a cleaner
environment in electromagnetic waves. As if by magic,
this
strategy, on the verge of paranoia anyway,
coupled with a fresh
medication, paid, reducing
symptoms, even if its hyperallergie
rest, waking up at
the slightest opportunity. Jean-Jacques
Villemot now
wants to go further, just as if it wanted to purge
his
body of all traces of toxic to sideline of a
civilization
that has become crazy because thirsting
technology. He dreams of
moving into a hut, "a refuge
healthy," he said. Without
nor portable computer. But
well into his skin, and in better
health.
Philippe ECALLE.
(1) These diseases created
by man, by Albin Michel.
Ouest-France
Français
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From Linda
Cumulative
Radiation Exposure Shows Increased Cancer Risk for Emergency
Department Patients
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------
http://www.blackwellpublishing.com/press/pressitem.asp?ref=1740
SOCIETY FOR ACADEMIC
EMERGENCY MEDICINE
Contact:
Sean Wagner
Wiley-Blackwell
781-388-8550
swagner@wiley.com
Cumulative Radiation Exposure Shows Increased Cancer Risk
for Emergency Department Patients
According to a new
study, patients are receiving estimated doses of radiation from
medical diagnostic imaging studies, such as CT (or "CAT")
scans, that may be detrimental to their long term health, putting
them at an increased risk of developing cancer. To date, emergency
physicians have not been made aware of the cumulative amount of
radiation that their patients receive. In fact they currently have no
way to know or estimate any given patient's cumulative dose. A new
study hopes to quantify and further explore these concerns.
Led
by Timothy B. Bullard, M.D., M.B.A of the Orlando Regional Medical
Center (ORMC), the cross-sectional study examined the amount of
ionizing radiation that a random selection of patients received over
a five-year period at ORMC and Washington Hospital Center in
Washington, D.C. The study is the first to estimate the total
cumulative radiation dosage delivered to a population from multiple
diagnostic imaging modalities during a defined period of time.
Patients had an average cumulative estimated effective
radiation dose of 45.0 milliseiverts, with CT scans and nuclear
medicine studies contributing the most radiation. Twelve percent of
the sample population was estimated to have received 100 or more
millisieverts of radiation, a value that exceeds the accepted
threshold of safety for exposure to low level ionizing radiation. If
study patients are representative of the general emergency department
population, then a substantial number of people may be placed at
increased risk of developing cancer over their lifetime from
diagnostic imaging studies as a result of these exposures.
"Our
research hopefully will affect the habits of physicians who routinely
order medical imaging diagnostic studies in their practices,"
says Bullard. "We also hope that our research will further
promote the need for electronic medical records with portability and
encourage the development of an individual patient cumulative
exposure estimate tool."
The presentation is
entitled "Cumulative Radiation Exposure and Cancer Risk from
Diagnostic Imaging in Patients Presenting to the Emergency
Department." This paper will be presented at the 2008 SAEM
Annual Meeting in Washington, D.C. on May 29, 2008, in the moderated
poster session beginning at 3:00 p.m. in Exhibit Hall A of the
Marriott Wardman Park Hotel. Abstracts are published in Vol. 15, No.
5, Supplement 1, May 2008 of Academic Emergency Medicine, the
official journal of the Society for Academic Emergency Medicine.
#
# #
About The Society for Academic Emergency Medicine
(www.saem.org)
The Society
for Academic Emergency Medicine (SAEM) is a national non-profit
organization of over 6,000 academic emergency physicians, emergency
medicine residents and medical students. SAEM's mission is to improve
patient care by advancing research and education in emergency
medicine. SAEM's vision is to promote ready access to quality
emergency care for all patients, to advance emergency medicine as an
academic and clinical discipline, and to maintain the highest
professional standards as clinicians, teachers, and researchers. The
SAEM Annual Meeting attracts approximately 2,000 medical students,
residents and academic emergency physicians. It provides the largest
forum for the presentation of original research in the specialty of
Emergency Medicine.
About Academic Emergency Medicine
(www.aemj.org)
AEM is a
peer-reviewed journal whose goal is to advance the science,
education, and clinical practice of emergency medicine, to serve as a
voice for the academic emergency medicine community, and to enhance
the goals and objectives of the Society for Academic Emergency
Medicine (SAEM). Members and non-members worldwide depend on this
journal for translational medicine relevant to emergency medicine, in
addition to clinical news, case studies and more.
About
Wiley-Blackwell
Wiley-Blackwell was formed in February 2007
as a result of the acquisition of Blackwell Publishing Ltd. by John
Wiley & Sons, Inc., and its merger with Wiley's Scientific,
Technical, and Medical business. Together, the companies have created
a global publishing business with deep strength in every major
academic and professional field. Wiley-Blackwell publishes
approximately 1,400 scholarly peer-reviewed journals and an extensive
collection of books with global appeal. For more information on
Wiley-Blackwell, please visit www.blackwellpublishing.com
or http://interscience.wiley.com.
Informant: Martin Weatherall