London
Sunday Times - Style Magazine
April 2nd, 2000 - p. 47 & 48
by Eva Gizowska
Fitness
• Health • Beauty
Worried that your mobile phone
could be frazzling your brain, or that your computer is sapping
your energy? According to the manufacturers of a small black pendant
embedded with what looks like a mini circuit board, wearing a QLink
could be just the protection you're looking for.
U2's Adam Clayton, the England
rugby star Jeremy Guscott and Hollywood veteran Dennis Hopper, are
apparently QLink fans. All believe their sci-fi looking pendants
may offer natural protection against harmful electromagnetic fields
(EMFs) produced by computers, mobile phones and other sources of
man-made electromagnetic radiation. Each pendant contains a specially
encoded resonating cell, tuning board and a copper coil.
According to the manufacturers,
the QLink strengthens the body's natural energy field so that it
can counteract the potential negative effect of EMFs, including
headaches, fatigue, nervous tension, even jet lag. Wearing a QLink
is also supposed to help concentration and energy levels.
Does it all sound too good to be
true? Well, professional opinion on its efficacy is divided. "The
best way to explain how the pendant works is to compare it to a
tuning fork." Says Soo Chin, head of research and development
at QLink in San Francisco. "Imagine two tuning forks. If you
strike the first one, it will begin to vibrate. This is called sympathetic
resonance. In the case of the QLink, your body acts like the original
tuning fork. It vibrates and sends out energy. The QLink is like
the second tuning fork. It balances and strengthens the personal
energy field, causing it to expand and create a bigger field of
protection."
There's certainly plenty of anecdotal
evidence to support the pendant's potential benefits. Take Ben Wallace,
an investment analyst who used to take 12 Nurofen a day. "Up
until two years ago, I used to suffer from truly terrible headaches,
which I believe were caused by sitting in front of two computer
screens all day. Then a friend suggested I try wearing a QLink,"
he said. "I must admit I was extremely doubtful at the time,
but I thought I might as well give it a try. Since wearing it, I
have had only one headache. I haven't a clue how it works, but it
seems to have worked for me."
Rose Montgomery, operations manager
at Eidos Interactive, in London, is another convert. "My job
entails sitting in front of the computer for up to 12 hours a day.
I also use two mobile phones. I had constant headaches, ringing
in my ears and my whole body felt wired al the time. I've been wearing
the QLink for three months and my energy levels and concentration
are back, and I no longer get headaches."
Dr Tykeeta Reye of the Whole Health
Clinic in Denver, Colorado recently carried out a study using a
computron — a machine used on acupuncture points to measure
energy fluctuations. The study showed that after using a hair dryer,
the EMF stress response exhibited by the body reverted to normal
when a QLink was worn for two minutes, and in some cases the body's
base energy level improved noticeably. However, many scientists
remain unconvinced that there is a problem with EMFs emitted from
everyday appliances as mobile phones and microwaves. In Britain,
the National Radiological Protection Board, for example, maintains
that the evidence for a link between electromagnetic fields and
health problems such as cancer is weak.
On the other hand, revolutionary
research by Roger Coghill, a biologist based in Wales who has been
studying the effects of EMFs for more than 20 years, and his wife,
Tamara Galonja-Coghill, a microbiologist, shows that every living
creature has a unique electromagnetic field. "All living creatures
emit electrical living fields," says Coghill. "Scientists
are just beginning top realize how important these are for wellbeing.
Unfortunately, as a result of modern technologies, we're being increasingly
exposed to all kinds of radiation that can disturb and weaken our
electromagnetic fields. This interferes with and lowers immunity."
According to Coghill, it is not beyond the realms of possibility
that certain devices, such as QLink may have the capability of negating
the effects of EMFs. However, hearsay is not enough. "In order
to prove that a device like QLink works, you need to carry out controlled
studies," says Coghill.
Dr Anthony Barker, a consultant
scientist at the department of medical physics and clinical engineering
at the Royal Hallamshire hospital, Sheffield, remains highly skeptical.
He carried out several tests on the QLink in 1998 — a visual
inspection, an xray, an electrical conductivity test and finally
he took it apart with a Stanley knife. He was not impressed and
dismissed it as a high-tech-looking gadget with no quantifiable
benefits. "I can conceive of no technology that you would wear
around your neck that could stop the radio-frequency energy from
a mobile phone getting into your head," he said. "And
if you did stop that energy, then surely the mobile phone wouldn't
work."
Scientists at Stanford University
in California are conducting an independent study on QLinks and
the results will be published in the next few weeks. Meanwhile,
if you're curious to try the QLink for yourself, there's a money
back guarantee if you don't experience any benefits within three
months.
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