Consumer Product Highlight: Qi-Me EMF Protection Devices
Larry Cook is an advocate for vaccine safety and recovery, and is currently partnered with the Dr. Clark Store to create a new product aimed at helping reduce anxiety and activate cognitive ability (to be released soon). Another issue which he is advocating for is EMF protection. He recently began promoting a product we support, and would like to share. Below is his email, followed by research that corroborates the claims of these new kinds of EMF devices that do no block out all EMFS, but create harmonic fields that better enable to body to cope with all the noise. The experience he reports, and the studies are truly remarkable.ย
From Larry Cook:
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Supporting Evidence
A 2019 report by the BION Institute in Ljubljana, Slovenia, commissioned and paid for by Qi-Technologies GmbH (the manufacturer of the product being tested). The study aimed to determine whether a device called the "Qi-Shield" could protect the human body from Wi-Fi router radiation.
Design: Fifteen volunteers each sat in a chair for 30-minute sessions while seven electrophysiological parameters were recorded (muscle activity, heart rate, skin conductance, respiration rate, finger temperature, heart rate variability, and thorax expansion depth). Each volunteer was tested under three conditions: Wi-Fi on with the real Qi-Shield, Wi-Fi on with an identical-looking sham device, and Wi-Fi off with the sham device. The study was described as blinded and randomised, meaning neither volunteers nor the test assistant knew which condition was active at any given time.
Results: Using Friedman tests with post-hoc Wilcoxon signed-rank comparisons (corrected for multiple comparisons), the authors reported statistically significant differences between groups across all seven parameters, particularly during the second half of each session. Skin conductance showed the strongest and most consistent effects. The authors interpreted the findings as indicating greater relaxation in the Qi-Shield group compared to the sham group.
Conclusion: The institute concluded that the Qi-Shield met its criteria for a "Certificate of Protective Influence on Human Organism against wireless router radiation."
