Ask HN: What can migraine sufferers do post-incandescent ban?
I don't have migraine myself, but I live with a family member who does. Never felt comfortable around CFLs because your house becomes a toxic waste accident if you drop one, and LEDs are a migraine trigger. My reading has lead me to believe CFLs have the same problem with migraine anyhow. My family member works from home because the lighting at his office is that bad. I thought the ban was staved off for a few years but we both heard on local news last night it's just a few days before the ban. Somehow we missed this before now. What can we do? Campaign for a medical exemption to be added?
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[ 3.0 ms ] story [ 32.5 ms ] threadIf the migraine is triggered by flickering, there are "special" flicker free bulbs, dimmers and power supplies/drivers (actually I think they make the flickering at a very high frequency, 1250 Hz or more instad of the "normal" 100-120 Hz).
I read that there are glasses with special lenses that may help, but of course it depends on the specific case, I know that there also filters (to be applied to lighting fixtures) but I have not any experience with them.
See item #10 - Naja https://brainworldmagazine.com/10-natural-remedies-pain-reli...
May be caused by magnesium deficiency? https://www.huffpost.com/entry/magnesium-the-most-powerf_b_4...
And stock up on triptans. I have pressure and hormonal migraines, so suffering is my only option and it sucks.