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Killer electric fans - Is falling asleep next to an electric fan a potentially fatal mistake?
Maclean's ^ | August 19, 2015 | Meagan Campbell

Posted on 08/20/2015 4:58:19 AM PDT by rickmichaels

Rose Kang describes that whenever a ceiling fan starts to spin, she vomits. After a few hours around any fan, she says, her cheeks start to swell and her head begins to pound. Yet, her experience is relatively minor. In South Korea, newspapers and a government agency report that the air blowing from an electric fan can cause death. “If you fall asleep with it going, you’ll die the next day,” says Kang, who moved from Seoul last year and now works at a hair salon in Toronto’s Koreatown.

The daily newspaper in Ulsan, one of Korea’s largest cities, wrote in 2013 that a 58-year-old man died, after an evening of heavy drinking, due to falling asleep with his fan blowing on him. He went to bed early; his wife called the ambulance at 7:13 p.m., and paramedics arrived 15 minutes later to find him dead. Later that month, Seoul’s main newspaper explained that, after drinking alcohol, sleeping with an electric fan running causes the body temperature to drop fatally low.

Hypothermia is not the only explanation for “fan death,” as the phenomenon is called in English. According to the Korea Consumer Agency, an arm of the government of South Korea, the air from fans may also cause dehydration by drying a person out. The agency warns that fans—and air conditioners—even more frequently lead people to suffocate, as the appliances will recycle exhaled carbon dioxide back into a person’s lungs. It lists “asphyxiation from electric fans and air conditioners” as the most common summertime injury (followed by sunburns among children left inside cars). “To prevent asphyxiation,” reads a warning from the agency in 2007, “timers should be set, wind direction should be rotated and doors should be left open.”

Between 2003 and 2005, the agency reported a total of 20 fan deaths. Its injury surveillance system says it collects data from 66 hospitals and 18 fire stations, as well as from individuals who report incidents through the agency’s hotline and website. The agency did not respond to requests for information about the number of fan deaths and injuries between 2014 and 2015, and the detective division of the Korean National Police Agency says it has not collected statistical data. However, warnings against fans continue—and not just in South Korea. Public Health England published a national plan for heat waves in May 2015, reading, “Fans can cause excess dehydration. The advice is to place fans at a certain distance from people, not aiming it directly on the body and to have regular drinks.” In June, the World Health Organization published a document titled Heatwaves and Health: Guidance on Warning System Development. The section on electric fans reads, “When used inappropriately, electric fans can exacerbate heat stress . . . Fans need to be used with caution and under specific conditions. Generally, the use of electric fans should be discouraged, unless they are bringing in significantly cooler air.”

Earlier this year, academics from the University of Ottawa and the University of Sydney published an article disproving the danger of dehydration by electric fan. They conclude, “Current public health guidelines regarding fan use during heat waves appear flawed.” The authors state that some guidance “partially violates fundamental physical laws” and “exaggerates the increased risk of dehydration with fan use.”

Of course, some South Koreans think the risk of death is just a fantasy. The Chosun Ilbo, a newspaper based in Seoul, published an article in 2014 titled, “Fan Suffocation, True or False?” It determined that an individual would instinctively wake up before suffocating or becoming hypothermic. Dr. Matthew Chin Young Kim, a family physician who grew up in Korea, laughs at the concept of fan death. “Unless the building materials in the room were very toxic, I don’t see how it could happen.” Danny Woo, a 21-year-old South Korean, says fan death is “a ridiculous fairy tale. It’s something parents tell their kids, and the government tells the parents, to get them to turn off the fans.”

Woo could be right. Fear of fan death may help Korea to conserve a vulnerable power supply. The country must import 96 per cent of its energy and, when two of its own power plants closed in 2013, the Ministry of Trade, Industry and Energy reported “unprecedented power shortages.” That summer, the ministry mandated public offices to cut energy consumption by as much as 20 per cent. Reuters once suggested a correlation between the first report of fan death in 1970 and the spike of energy concerns in Korea. However, the fear may have begun right from the advent of electric fans in the early 1900s. By that time, the Buddhist prioritization of the breath and fluctuations in the body had been influencing the culture for 1,500 years.

Samsung Electronics Co., a Korean company, continues to sell fans in South Korea, but all their models sold locally either have built-in clocks or timers to automatically shut off fans. Eunyoung You, an electronic product designer who designs fans for Samsung, explains, “Some people say they have puffy face[s] in the morning if they leave the fan turned on.”

Now that Kang lives in Toronto, where the average July temperature is about five degrees lower than in Seoul, she does not risk using a fan at all. However, as a hairdresser, Kang also worries about the danger of her blowdryer. She cleans it at least once per month to ensure it does not collect bacteria, which she says would make its airflow even more harmful, and she takes heed not to aim in any client’s face. “I use the lowest setting, not for more than 20 minutes,” she says. Kang must watch the clock herself. Even in Korea, hairdryers do not come with timers.


TOPICS: Miscellaneous
KEYWORDS: fan; fandeath; junkscience; korea; sasquatch; southkorea; tabloids
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1 posted on 08/20/2015 4:58:19 AM PDT by rickmichaels
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To: rickmichaels

Bull shavacky


2 posted on 08/20/2015 5:00:11 AM PDT by envisio (I ain't here long... I'm out of napalm and .22 bullets.)
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To: rickmichaels

Nuts, whacko, insane, deranged, mentally unhinged.

Similar to those that thought automobiles would be the death of people due to air moving too quickly.

I can’t possibly sleep without a fan. I find 70 degrees to be unpleasantly hot.


3 posted on 08/20/2015 5:02:15 AM PDT by Crazieman (Article V or National Divorce. The only solutions now.)
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To: envisio

By the truck load.


4 posted on 08/20/2015 5:03:21 AM PDT by snuffy smiff (Socialism is the philosophy of failure, the creed of ignorance, and the gospel of envy.)
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To: rickmichaels

The Bride and I have ceiling fans in every room, and a floor fan constantly on, in addition to the A/C.

I call BS.


5 posted on 08/20/2015 5:03:37 AM PDT by Old Sarge (I prep because DHS and FEMA told me it was a good idea...)
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To: rickmichaels


6 posted on 08/20/2015 5:05:49 AM PDT by JoeProBono (SOME IMAGES MAY BE DISTURBING VIEWER DISCRETION IS ADVISED;-{)
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To: rickmichaels
“If you fall asleep with it going, you’ll die the next day,”

This is going to be bad news to Texans...

And then, there's this


7 posted on 08/20/2015 5:06:06 AM PDT by Paine in the Neck (Socialism consumes EVERYTHING)
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To: rickmichaels

Hold on a second, I have to turn the fan up. .......Ok, what a crock of crap this article is!!


8 posted on 08/20/2015 5:07:51 AM PDT by Batman11 (The orange, weeping, drunk, squishy oompah-loompah and Yertle McTurd-le gotta go!)
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To: rickmichaels

We have an electric fan over our bed. My wife likes the breeze and we leave it on every night. We have for years.

Of course, I should point out that I’m posting this from beyond the grave. We just got wi-fi last week!


9 posted on 08/20/2015 5:09:05 AM PDT by cuban leaf (The US will not survive the obama presidency. The world may not either.)
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To: envisio

20 deaths?


10 posted on 08/20/2015 5:11:12 AM PDT by Robert A Cook PE (I can only donate monthly, but socialists' ABBCNNBCBS continue to lie every day!)
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To: Crazieman

“Nuts, whacko, insane, deranged, mentally unhinged.

Similar to those that thought automobiles would be the death of people due to air moving too quickly.

I can’t possibly sleep without a fan. I find 70 degrees to be unpleasantly hot.”

My wife needs to sleep in a freezer
AC set to 72 (I won’t allow lower) Ceiling fan, oscillating floor fan, with no sheet or blanket and only wearing a thin white night gown

There are nights I go to sleep in another room where I don’t need a quilt here in the equatorial climate


11 posted on 08/20/2015 5:11:12 AM PDT by Fai Mao (Genius at Large)
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To: rickmichaels

I’ve had ceiling fans over my bed for 30 years. I don’t remember every having it completely off. We reverse the rotation each fall and spring.


12 posted on 08/20/2015 5:12:40 AM PDT by SamAdams76 (We gave GOP the majority to take care of business and they let us down. Time for Trump/Cruz)
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To: rickmichaels
Rose Kang describes that whenever a ceiling fan starts to spin, she vomits.

Must be a lot of fun at parties.

13 posted on 08/20/2015 5:14:38 AM PDT by Arm_Bears (Biology is biology. Everything else is imagination.)
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To: rickmichaels

Most Texans would be dead if we turned off the AC, so we’ll take our chances, leaving our AC units running full blast from May to November.


14 posted on 08/20/2015 5:14:58 AM PDT by txrefugee
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To: rickmichaels

I grew up in the south, in the 50s, without air conditioning. I was forced to sleep with a fan running. I hated it. To this day I cannot stand having a fan going when I sleep. On the rare occasion when I have to I won’t let the flow of air come anywhere near me. Just my own personal phobia.


15 posted on 08/20/2015 5:15:48 AM PDT by Mercat (The angel of the LORD encamps around those who fear him and delivers them.)
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To: Crazieman

I sleep with a fan next to my face. The white noise covers up my tinnitus & the airflow helps me to breathe since I have heart trouble & shortness of breath.

Sounds like the South Korean power company is trying to scare people into using less electricity.

Or maybe having dog for dinner causes nighttime acid reflux.

(sorry, couldn’t resist)


16 posted on 08/20/2015 5:16:18 AM PDT by elcid1970 ("The Second Amendment is more important than Islam.")
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To: Fai Mao

>> My wife needs to sleep in a freezer

Your wife and mine must be cousins. I’ll bet I’ve met you at a family reunion. :-)


17 posted on 08/20/2015 5:16:41 AM PDT by Nervous Tick (There is no "allah" but satan, and mohammed was his demon-possessed tool.)
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To: Old Sarge

The rare male that is extremely heat intolerant. Drove my ex wife nuts, family nuts, and friends nuts.


18 posted on 08/20/2015 5:17:32 AM PDT by Crazieman (Article V or National Divorce. The only solutions now.)
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I had an elderly aunt who attributed the crib death of an infant relative (this is over 100 years ago) to a cat being seen in the nursery. In the story, the cat had sat on the infant’s chest and ‘drew out the breath’ of the baby.

This poor woman lived in deathly fear of cats (and germs carried by mice– remember the 1918 flu) her entire life.


19 posted on 08/20/2015 5:17:53 AM PDT by IncPen (Not one single patriot in Washington, DC.)
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To: Fai Mao

My wife is the same. She wants it cold, ridiculously so.


20 posted on 08/20/2015 5:18:26 AM PDT by central_va (I won't be reconstructed and I do not give a damn.)
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