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Health risks from wind farms identified in 2009 but governments still ignore them

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Noise and vibration coming from large turbines are behind an increase in heart disease, migraine, panic attacks and other health problems, according to research by an American doctor.

As reported by The Independent in 2009, living too close to wind turbines can cause heart disease, tinnitus, vertigo, panic attacks, migraines and sleep deprivation, according to research published by Dr. Nina Pierpont, a leading New York paediatrician.


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Dr. Pierpoint, a fellow of the American Academy of Paediatrics, trained at Johns Hopkins University School of Medicine and earned her PhD in Population Biology from Princeton.

She studied symptoms of people living near wind turbines in the US, the UK, Italy, Ireland and Canada for more than five years.  As a result of her study, she identified a new health risk: Wind Turbine Syndrome (“WTS”), the disruption or abnormal stimulation of the inner ear’s vestibular system by turbine infrasound and low-frequency noise.

The most distinctive feature of WTS is a group of symptoms which Dr. Pierpont calls visceral vibratory vestibular disturbance (“VVVD”). They cause problems ranging from internal pulsation, quivering, nervousness, fear, a compulsion to flee, chest tightness and tachycardia – increased heart rate. Turbine noise can also trigger nightmares and other disorders in children as well as harm cognitive development in the young, she claimed. However, Dr. Pierpont also made it clear that not all people living close to turbines are susceptible.

In late 2009, she published a 66-page book titled ‘Wind Turbine Syndrome’. Those pushing the World Economic Forum/United Nations’ climate change agenda claim wind energy is a “clean, green, renewable.” Wind is a multi-billion-dollar-a-year industry and those who stand to make a lot of money from it wouldn’t want negative health or environmental impacts to get in their way.  So it was bad news for them when Dr. Pierpont’s peer-reviewed report revealed wind’s dirty little secret.

The rapidly spinning blades can produce a weak but distinctive noise, as well as disruptions in air pressure. The noise is generated by the movement of the blades through the air, as well as from the turbine machinery. Infrasound is sound that is lower in frequency than 20 Hz or cycles per second. That’s the “normal” limit of human hearing.

Many people living within 1.25 miles, or 2 km, of these spinning giants get sick. So sick that they often abandon – as in, lock the door and leave – their homes. Nobody wants to buy their acoustically toxic homes. The “lucky ones” get quietly bought out by the wind developers – who steadfastly refuse to acknowledge that WTS exists. The wind developers “thoughtfully” include a confidentiality clause in the sales agreement, forbidding their victim from discussing the matter further.

Dr. Pierpont told The Independent:

“There is no doubt that my clinical research shows that the infrasonic to ultrasonic noise and vibrations emitted by wind turbines cause the symptoms which I am calling Wind Turbine Syndrome. There are about 12 different health problems associated with WTS and these range from tachycardia, sleep disturbance, headaches, tinnitus, nausea, visual blurring, panic attacks with sensations of internal quivering to more general irritability.

“The wind industry will try to discredit me and disparage me, but I can cope with that … The wind industry, however, is not composed of clinicians, nor is it made up of people suffering from wind turbines.”

Are wind farms a health risk? US scientist identifies ‘wind turbine syndrome’, The Independent, 2 August 2009

After publishing her book in late 2009, Pierpont heard from people around the world who were discovering that WTS is not confined to living in the shadow of industrial wind turbines (“IWTs”). It turns out people suffer identical symptoms from living close to natural gas compressor stations, industrial sewage pumping stations, industrial air conditioners, and other power plants. In each case, low-frequency noise and infrasound appear to be the chief disease-causing culprit – basically, WTS without the turbines.

In the UK, The Independent noted,  Dr. Christopher Hanning, founder of the British Sleep Society, who backed her research, said: “Dr. Pierpont’s detailed recording of the harm caused by wind turbine noise will lay firm foundations for future research. It should be required reading for all planners considering wind farms.

The Daily Mail noted that in 2009 there were 219 wind farms in Britain, and Climate Change Secretary Ed Miliband had plans for around 4,000 extra turbines to be installed.

Should The Independent’s article disappear from public view we have downloaded a copy and attached it below.

In 2013, three Canadians – a family physician, a retired pharmacist and a management accountant – published an article about the adverse health effects of IWTs. The authors stated that physicians can expect to see increasing numbers of rural patients reporting adverse effects from exposure to IWTs.

People who live or work in close proximity to IWTs have experienced symptoms that include decreased quality of life, annoyance, stress, sleep disturbance, headache, anxiety, depression, and cognitive dysfunction. Some have also felt anger, grief, or a sense of injustice. Suggested causes of symptoms include a combination of wind turbine noise, infrasound, dirty electricity, ground current, and shadow flicker. Family physicians should be aware that patients reporting adverse effects from IWTs might experience symptoms that are intense and pervasive and might feel further victimised by a lack of caregiver understanding.

Adverse health effects of industrial wind turbines, National Library of Medicine, May 2013

In its 2009 article, The Independent noted: “Until now, the Government and the wind companies have denied any health risks associated with the powerful noises and vibrations emitted by wind turbines.”

In 2018, the World Health Organisation updated its noise guidelines for Europe:

Compared to previous WHO guidelines on noise, this version contains five significant developments:

  • stronger evidence of the cardiovascular and metabolic effects of environmental noise;
  • inclusion of new noise sources, namely wind turbine noise and leisure noise, in addition to noise from transportation (aircraft, rail and road traffic) …
New WHO noise guidelines for Europe released, World Health Organisation, 10 October 2018

Despite this, the denial of health risks of wind turbines continues. For example, SP Wind, the sole business of which is to provide training for personnel working in the wind industry, states on its website that the symptoms of WTS are psychological:

Wind Turbine Syndrome – Hoax or health risk? SP Wind, 18 March 2022, retrieved 25 February 2023

And an article on How Stuff Works states:

What distance should a wind turbine be from a domestic property?

Since the scientific community doesn’t agree whether living near a wind turbine has any negative consequences on a person’s health, there is currently no consensus on how far away a residential home should be from one. Buffer-zone regulations may eventually be introduced, but there aren’t any in the US at this time.

Do Wind Turbines Cause Health Problems? How Stuff Works

Once again, the public’s health is being gaslighted for sake of company profits and the “climate change” agenda.

Further reading:

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1 year ago

[…] As reported by The Independent in 2009, living too close to wind turbines can cause heart disease, tinnitus, vertigo, panic attacks, migraines and sleep deprivation, according to research published by Dr. Nina Pierpont, a leading New York paediatrician. […]

trackback
1 year ago

[…] Frasin raportat de Independentul în anul 2009locuirea prea aproape de turbinele eoliene poate provoca boli de inima, tinitus, vertij, atacuri de panică, migrene și privarea de somn, potrivit cercetărilor publicate de Dr. Nina Pierpontun medic pediatru de frunte din New York. […]

Dan Gilfry
Dan Gilfry
1 year ago

So WHY do White Cowards let Foreign Nazis rule them!?
Why do White Cowards NOT have the balls to get RID of them!?
Whiney, whiney, whiney all the time but NEVER say “No!” to
your Foreign Nazi “gods”!

biggrump
biggrump
1 year ago

It just shows that they have another agenda other than climate change. All of the green alternatives except hydro-electric have major drawbacks due to their reliability and also to the enormous costs and inability to be recycled and also if they were really interested in cutting carbon, although the majority of scientists agree it will make little or no difference, the huge carbon footprint of producing wind turbines and batteries for vehicles.

biggrump
biggrump
Reply to  biggrump
1 year ago

I also forgot to mention the large number of birds and bats that are being killed by the turbines.

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1 year ago

[…] ZDROJ: The Exposé https://expose-news.com/2023/02/26/health-risks-from-wind-farms-identified-in-2009/ […]

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1 year ago

[…] that living close to wind turbines has adverse health consequences for humans.  The turbines can cause heart disease, tinnitus, vertigo, panic attacks, migraine headaches, and sleep deprivation, […]

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1 year ago

[…] Kingdom, Italy, Ireland and Canada for more than five years. She coined all these symptoms as wind turbine syndrome (WTS), which is the disruption or abnormal stimulation of the inner ear’s vestibular system by […]

trackback
1 year ago

[…] Kingdom, Italy, Ireland and Canada for more than five years. She coined all these symptoms as wind turbine syndrome (WTS), which is the disruption or abnormal stimulation of the inner ear’s vestibular system by […]

trackback
1 year ago

[…] earned her Ph.D. in Population Biology from Princeton University. Her research warned in 2009 that wind turbine syndrome (WTS) was a real phenomenon. She studied symptoms of people living near wind turbines in the US, […]

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11 months ago

[…] des populations de l’Université de Princeton. Ses recherches ont averti en 2009 que le syndrome des éoliennes (WTS) était un phénomène réel. Elle a étudié les symptômes de personnes vivant près […]