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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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To: rickmichaels

In ‘Nam, the barracks were not air conditioned. I worked a night shift and had to sleep during the day. To be able to sleep, I placed a window fan at the foot of my bed blasting on me. I guess I’m lucky I survived.


21 posted on 08/20/2015 5:19:05 AM PDT by chopperman
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To: rickmichaels

>> Rose Kang describes that whenever a ceiling fan starts to spin, she vomits.

Interesting.

Earlier in my depraved life I occasionally had the same problem, but with furniture.

Whenever the bed would start to spin, I’d vomit soon after.

Usually happened late at night after parties.


22 posted on 08/20/2015 5:19:26 AM PDT by Nervous Tick (There is no "allah" but satan, and mohammed was his demon-possessed tool.)
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To: rickmichaels

23 posted on 08/20/2015 5:19:48 AM PDT by P.O.E. (Pray for America)
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To: rickmichaels

The WMD of fans

24 posted on 08/20/2015 5:21:24 AM PDT by Flick Lives (One should not attend even the end of the world without a good breakfast. -- Heinlein)
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To: rickmichaels
So these guys are blaming fans for deaths and offer up several examples. Gee, you don't think maybe the one guy died of alcohol poisoning and there just happened to be a fan there? Or that people who died of dehydration in heat waves did that because the heat wave dehydrated them and they happened to be using a fan to try to cool down?

The notion that closing a room and using AC could cause suffocation is silly. Do the math. Google volume of air per day - about 11,000 liters. Now convert that to cubic feet, about 388. Now realize that even a modest sized bedroom is say 10x10 ft with 7 ft ceilings. That's 700 cubic feet. Yes, subtract a little for furniture etc. You still have more than enough air in the room for an entire day, not just sleeping overnight. Also, the air you breath in is roughly 20% oxygen. The air you exhale back out is roughly 15%. You only get about 1/4 of the oxygen out of the air. (this is part of why CPR and mouth-to-mouth resuscitation works)

25 posted on 08/20/2015 5:21:30 AM PDT by ThunderSleeps (Stop obarma now! Stop the hussein - insane agenda!)
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To: rickmichaels
While I consider the whole article to be a huge load what really got me was when they said this(followed by sunburns among children left inside cars). I mean really they died from sunburn after being left inside of a car. Hmmm I don't think sunburn was the cause.
26 posted on 08/20/2015 5:21:30 AM PDT by KirbDog
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To: rickmichaels

Somebody escaped from the loony bin.


27 posted on 08/20/2015 5:21:54 AM PDT by I want the USA back (Media: completely irresponsible. Complicit in the destruction of this country)
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To: Nervous Tick

“>> 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. :-)”

Actually I had a fan once but she stopped clapping and I sent her home


28 posted on 08/20/2015 5:27:25 AM PDT by Fai Mao (Genius at Large)
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To: txrefugee
Something that has always cracked me up while working in the North Dakota Oil Patch. In the command center, the Texans would have the AC going until it was 60 inside in the summertime--any warmer, and they'd complain about the heat.

In the winter (temps zero and below outside) they'd have the heat set on 80--anything less was too cold.

29 posted on 08/20/2015 5:27:42 AM PDT by Smokin' Joe (How often God must weep at humans' folly. Stand fast. God knows what He is doing.)
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To: Arm_Bears
Must be a lot of fun at parties.

Hold ma beer, watch this?

30 posted on 08/20/2015 5:27:52 AM PDT by rarestia (It's time to water the Tree of Liberty.)
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To: rickmichaels

Same people who get headaches from power lines and hear AM radio via their fillings.


31 posted on 08/20/2015 5:29:37 AM PDT by bigbob (The best way to get a bad law repealed is to enforce it strictly. Abraham Lincoln)
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To: envisio

I’m more worried about cheap Chinese electrical wiring in my ceiling fans. Many people I know let their ceiling fans run all the time. I’ve heard there are many fires caused by ceiling fans but have never seen any evidence of it.


32 posted on 08/20/2015 5:30:00 AM PDT by blueheron2
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To: Fai Mao
Actually I had a fan once but she stopped clapping and I sent her home

Just as well. You probably didn't need the claps...

33 posted on 08/20/2015 5:30:03 AM PDT by Smokin' Joe (How often God must weep at humans' folly. Stand fast. God knows what He is doing.)
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To: Fai Mao

lol


34 posted on 08/20/2015 5:34:42 AM PDT by Nervous Tick (There is no "allah" but satan, and mohammed was his demon-possessed tool.)
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To: rickmichaels
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,

Wow, I must be immortal. I've fallen asleep with the fan a few feet away and blowing directly on me for decades.

35 posted on 08/20/2015 5:35:02 AM PDT by thackney (life is fragile, handle with prayer)
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To: rickmichaels

On a par with the valid statistic that tomatoes are fatal, as most people who die have eaten tomatoes or tomato products shortly before death. Statistics are powerful tools but as the saying goes, you can prove almost anything with stats.


36 posted on 08/20/2015 5:35:41 AM PDT by SES1066 (Quality, Speed or Economical - Any 2 of 3 except in government - 1 at best but never #3!)
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To: rickmichaels
Fan death.


37 posted on 08/20/2015 5:37:41 AM PDT by clearcarbon
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To: rickmichaels
There couldn't be any other cause of death could there?
We better pay a bunch of white coated guys to say "Yeah, fans are bad for you." and then the science will be settled.

38 posted on 08/20/2015 5:40:57 AM PDT by BitWielder1 (I'd rather have Unequal Wealth than Equal Poverty.)
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To: Old Sarge

Wow I thought I was the only one. I have my fan on in my bedroom on 24hr a day. The reason my bedroom is located in the back and not enough circulation runs thru there even with the windows open. The fan helps especially when one is going thru hot flashes. =)


39 posted on 08/20/2015 5:43:21 AM PDT by Patriot Babe
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To: rickmichaels
And this is one of the best-educated, most technologically savvy countries in the world.

Bizarre.

40 posted on 08/20/2015 5:44:03 AM PDT by wideawake
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