The
GS-3000 Anion Generating Air Purifier
Negative Ions May Be An Answer to the Video Blahs!!
William
Johnson Times Tribune Staff
Reprinted from the Peninsula Times Tribune
REDWOOD
CITY- A case of the blahs at work may really be a case
of the "VODS." Workplaces where video display terminals are used are subject to contamination
with discomforting positive ions, according to a consultant
to the Food and Drug Administration. VODS stands for Video Operator
Distress Syndrome,
and the troublesome malady is not uncommon among the
millions of workers who use computer video display terminals. Charles
Wallach, consultant
to the Food and Drug Administration on the effects of
working with electronic video equipment, told reporters in the San
Mateo County Hall of Justice
and Records pressroom how to beat a case of the VODS.
Wallach,
64, works in Washington, D.C. He has served as a consultant
to many government agencies and industries to create a more healthy
indoor working
environment. The cause of the VODS, Wallach said, is
a high electrostatic charge generated on the face of a video screen’s
cathode ray tube. Government
standards protect the intrinsic safety of cathode ray
tubes. Wallach said, but the VODS nevertheless still can do bodily
harm. "This charge, which may quickly reach many thousands of volts when the tube is
energized, is not in itself a hazard. The tube merely creates the hazard
within the foot or so of air space between itself and the operator’s
face," Wallach said.
Those
who work too close to the face of a cathode ray tube or who work before
a terminal for too long a time typically experience increased fatigue
levels, eye strain, blurred vision, skin rash, headaches, back pains,
irritability, anxiety, depression, an d general apathy. While the cause
of these symptoms may also be a depleted bank account, domestic troubles
or a tyrannical boss, they can be caused by the computer terminal, Wallach
said. The culprits that cause the VODS are positive ions or charged molecules of air, created at the face of the video display terminal.
What
are needed in the workplace, Wallace explained, are negative ions. In contrast to positive ions, negatively charged molecules of air, or negative
ions, promote a sense of well-being for people. "Every place people like to be is rich in negative ions," Wallach said. Video display terminal operators need their negative ions. "In weighing the evidence, I am convinced that the aero-electrostatic qualities
of an indoor environment are the most significant single factor in the
control of unavoidable indoor air pollution," Wallach said.
Most
commonly, offices need to install equipment to generate negative ions
in the air above the video terminal operators. At the northern Santa
Clara County Communications center in Palo Alto City Hall, negative
ion generators were installed on the ceiling over the dispatchers about
a year and a half ago.
Cliff
Almeida, operations manager at the communications center, said Monday
that the ionizers have definitely filtered out pipe and cigarette smoke.
But he declined to speculate whether the ionizers created a better working
environment with less stress.
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For
a home without an HVAC system or for an individual
office setting , our recommendation is the GS-3000 negative ion generator.
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