box spring mattresses and cancer

box spring mattresses and cancer

box spring mattress donation

Box Spring Mattresses And Cancer

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We stand for: PREVENTION is the best CURE !!! However, we can also HELP YOU with these ILLNESSES and related PROBLEMS !!! Remember: Your Doctor, is not the 'Master of your Health' - you are, and entitled to a 2nd and 3rd Opinion … and more if you need! It's YOUR LEGAL RIGHT !!! ►►► Press Release for our 21st Anniversary ◄◄◄ Yes, it is proclaimed that Coil Spring Mattresses are the best there are! They are stated to be the best to fully supports the sleeper’s body weight and adjust to the body's shape and are even promoted and endorsed by many orthopaedic surgeons and physiotherapists. - If you still believe THIS, which is true never the less, but somehow the most important information was not communicated and therefore you should definitely read this article! I would have to actually call it an ''antenna and amplifier with an attached resonating circuit''. Why this is the case I will describe as follows. Yet another complicating factor to your HEALTH - believe it or not- is the use of a coil spring mattress, as this will work like an amplifier of various electro magnetic fields and radiation (EMF/EMR) and also Geopathic Zones.




- This is especially true - and aggravating the problems - when you are also using an electric blanket, as the electric energy is directly transferred to into the mattress, which is then amplifying the electrical field and radiation resonating at the mains frequency of 50Hz/60Hz depending of the country. Are your Mattress and Bed Frame killing you with EMF? Sleeping with Cancer - Coils in Mattresses act as a giant Radiation Antenna !! Your Mattress Could be Acting as a Cancer-Causing Radiation Antenna Uploaded on 20 Dec 2011, by Alexis Mckenzie The rate of breast cancer in Western countries is 10 percent higher in the left breast than in the right. This also is true for the skin cancer melanoma. Researchers have suggested a surprising explanation for this — and for the dramatic increase in rates of breast cancer and melanoma over the past three decades. In Japan, there is no correlation between the rates of melanoma and breast cancer, and there is no left-side prevalence for either disease.




The rate of breast cancer in Japan is also significantly lower than in the West. This may be due to differences in sleeping habits in Japan and Western countries. Previous research has shown that people prefer to sleep on their right sides, possibly as a way of reducing weight stress on the heart. This is most likely the same in both the East and the West, but the futons used for sleeping in Japan are mattresses placed directly on the bedroom floor, in contrast to the elevated box springs and mattress of beds used in the West. According to Scientific American:[A] 2007 study in Sweden conducted between 1989 and 1993 … revealed a strong link between the incidence of melanoma and the number of FM and TV transmission towers covering the area where the individuals lived … Consider, however, that even a TV set cannot respond to broadcast transmissions unless the weak electromagnetic waves are captured and amplified by an appropriately designed antenna. Antennas are simply metal objects of appropriate length sized to match the wavelength of a specific frequency of electromagnetic radiation."




In the U.S., bed frames and box springs are made of metal, and the length of a bed is exactly half the wavelength of FM and TV transmissions. The maximum strength of the field develops 75 centimeters above the mattress, so when sleeping on your right side, your left side will be exposed to the highest field strength. Mattress Springs and the Earths Natural Magnetic Field Published on 11 Jun 2012, by StevenMageeBooks Mattresses are known to be filled with metal coils. How does this interact with the Earths magnetic field? We demonstrate this with a standard compass. Beds, Fatigue, and Cell Phone Tower Sickness Published on 25 Jul 2012, by StevenMageeBooks The side of the bed that you choose to sleep on can be the deciding factor in whether you are healthy or not. Much to my surprise, I cleared up my fatigue symptoms by simply switching sides! Unfortunately, it did confirm my worst fears that there are patches of harmful radiation in city and suburban environments!!!




The current ICNIRP exposure limit to protect against acute heating from microwaves is 61 V/m (at 2.45 GHz). The Public Health Department of the Government of Salzburg (2002) recommend an outdoor exposure limit of 0.06 V/m (0.001 µW/cm2, 1 nW/cm2) and an indoor limit of 0.02 V/m (0.0001 µW/cm2, 0.1 nW/cm2) for radio frequency radiation, to protect against the damaging non-thermal effects of microwaves. The Voltage on a Metal Coil Mattress from Multiple Electrical Circuits Published on 1 May 2013, by StevenMageeBooks We measure the voltage on a metal coil mattress that is exposed to multiple electrical circuits. I no longer sleep on a metal coil mattress and now sleep on a foam mattress and I have found that my quality of sleep has improved. The Voltage and Frequencies on a Metal Coil Mattress from CFL and LED Lamps on an Inverter Published on 18 May 2013, by StevenMageeBooks We test a 12 volt DC to 120 volt AC modified sine wave inverter that is powering 2 LED and 4 CFL light bulbs of different types next to a metal sprung mattress.




I lived in an off grid home for a few years and I saw my health run down while I lived there. I now attribute that failing health to dirty electricity exposure. I recovered my health once I started to avoid dirty electricity sources and wireless transmitter emissions. My phone line always had a buzzing on it which appeared to come from the inverter system. My electrician said it was a common feature of off grid homes! I do not recommend that people power their homes with modified sine wave inverters. You may get radio wave sickness and electromagnetic hypersensitivity. Now imagine what would happen at 240V !! Copyright © 1993 - 2015, by Institute for Geopathology SA and the respective authors. We like what we do. We are leading South Africa since 1993. We're looking forward to doing it for you, too.The last time I bought a mattress for myself was about 11 years ago. I bought a fairly new full-sized one off a coworker. Four moves and a decade later, we’ve decided it’s time to replace it with an adult (and sometimes an extra toddler)-sized bed.




When we started looking, I was shocked at the prices. $3000 for a mattress? What the heck are these things made of? Knowing very little, we went shopping for a mattress and other things on a Saturday morning. The first place, we stopped, Sleepy’s, seemed nice enough. We laid on a few and honed in on the one that we both felt most comfortable in. Meanwhile, Audrey discovered the fun of letting herself fall backwards onto mattresses and did it all over the store. She was giggling and the whole store couldn’t help but look and smile at her. Unfortunately, we soon stopped smiling. When we found something we liked, the seemingly helpful salesman started to get more aggressive. He asked how much we were looking at paying and I made up a number on the spot, something way below the listed price on the bed. The said he would “talk with his manager” and see if he could get us that price. Then he started asking us if we could commit and have it delivered tomorrow. Anne had walked outside to give Audrey a break by that point, so I said I had to go out and talk with her about it.




We talked about it for a bit, then decided we didn’t like the high-pressure sales pitch, so we got ready to leave. I had the car started up when the salesman came out and approached the car window. He then said that he had “talked to his manager” and he could give us the price we wanted AND a free “platinum package”. I said we would talk about it and let him know. We again decided this was sketchy, but to make good on my promise, I went in and gave him my phone number and left. Later that day we went to Jordan’s Furniture, generally known to be a reputable place with reasonable places. The salespeople there were nice and NOT high-pressure. Prices were generally lower, but strangely, we couldn’t find the mattress we found at Sleepy’s. They had Sertas, but not the one we liked. Being indecisive, we left with a couple new names of ones we liked. Later, we went to Mattress Discounters. The woman there was not pushy and told us about the BBB complaints that Sleepy’s (a 700-store chain) had gotten.




We decided to think some more and head home. At home, I did some research online and I found something strange – I couldn’t find much of anything on the mattresses we saw that we liked. I found some mattresses, many of the same brand, but not the same models. I later came to find out that this was completely intentional. The mattress industry is one big scam. There is no way to make an objective decision on a mattress using actual facts. Here’s a few things that the mattress industry does to get you: 1. They mark up their prices 100% to 200%!! No wonder the first guy was able to get his “manager” to give me such a steep discount. They were probably still going to make hundreds of dollars of profits on it. 2. They give the same mattresses different names in different stores or they set up exclusivity agreements by mattress line in certain stores. This makes it impossible to comparison shop because… 3. They make it really had to get actual facts about the mattresses.




Stuff like coil counts, materials, overall construction are shrouded in secrecy. But that doesn’t really matter because… 4. There’s no objective measure of mattress quality. Consumer Reports won’t rate them because they can’t get the data and there’s no testing that actually says higher coil counts are better or the number of wires in the coils makes a difference in any way. You’re left to deciding how much you believe the marketing. Is a pillow top made of alpaca hair any better than one made of cotton? Your guess is as good as mine. 5. There’s very little online reviews of mattresses, probably because the model names are so fractured. The ones I did find looked more like content-free sites designed to attract referral credits. With some more research, I found out that it was somewhat possible to compare mattresses models from different places. It turns out that they really only make one hardness variation in each line. So you can assume that a Plush Firm mattress in the “Classic” line, is the same as another Plush Firm in the Classic line, even if they have different names.




was very helpful in figuring this out. We were able to understand which mattresses we saw and how they related to each other. For example, the mattress we liked at Jordan’s was a product line better than the one we saw at Mattress Discounters, even though they came out to the same price! Clearly Jordan’s had the better deal, but US-Mattress had an even better deal. So I did something I never thought I could do, buy a mattress over the internet. I’m pretty sure it’s the same one we saw in the store and the free delivery and frame were a good deal. I’m sure that even if I’m getting it at half the price I saw it listed at elsewhere, they’re still making a decent profit on it. Anne and I agree that buying a mattress is worse than buying a car. While both have sketchy salespeople, when you buy a car, you can compare them on MPG, size, features, etc. Multiple dealers have the same models so you can compare prices and make an informed decision based on their invoice prices.

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