Block Blue Light and EMF at Your Desk

How eWell Supports Office and Tech Workers
Anyone who spends hours in front of a screen or wears a SmartWatch or fitness tracker can benefit from wearing an eWell Puck. Blue light from looking at screens all day likely contributes to chronic dehydration, and the eWell Puck is an easy way to support healthy hydration. Natural light from the sun is what drives healthy cellular functioning in our bodies and the eWell as provides the same support for the times we are not getting enough time in natural sunlight.
From Innovative Saddles
to Wellness Puck
Discover the eWell Puck — a non-electronic and medicine-free tool to improve your performance. This innovative technology was developed by double Olympic gold medalist Tad Coffin from a lifetime of combined expertise in sports and wellness.
For years, horses using our saddles have benefited from eWell's technology — experiencing significant improvements in hydration, skin quality, muscle tone and recovery, joint flexibility, relaxation, digestive functioning, cardiovascular performance and lymphatic system circulation.
After ecstatic feedback from horse owners who have been experimenting placing the saddle technology in their homes, we've made the smaller eWell Puck. It's the same innovation as our saddles — and it fits in your pocket.

Hydration Redefined
for Modern Life
At eWell, we understand that blue light and EMF can impact your quality of life. The eWell Puck is your wearable, convenient, unobtrusive, and essential hydrating device.
The technology in the eWell Puck generates a resonating energy in the far infrared spectrum that, among other effects, charges your 'water battery.'
This gives your metabolism the energy to function at a more optimal level. Its effects will manifest differently among users, as metabolic deficits will vary from person to person.
The eWell Puck is engineered to help you achieve better hydration, enhancing your performance and well-being.
Elevate Your Hydration Game with the eWell Puck
How it Works
A combination of materials and manufacturing processes of the eWell Puck create piezoelectricity, which is re-radiated as a far-infrared field. This field resonates with the energy field of our own bodies.
The Science Behind eWell
The eWell Puck enhances your well-being through eight distinct pathways: Better Sleep, Better Hydration, Pain Relief, Reduced Inflammation, Reduced Anxiety, More Energy, Physical Recovery, and non-native blue light and EMF Protection.
Better Sleep: Users report that they fall asleep faster and enjoy deeper, more restorative sleep cycles. Quality sleep is the foundation of good health. The eWell Puck’s resonating energy in the Far infrared spectrum helps improve sleep quality.
Better Hydration: One of the first signs of better hydration is healthier, smoother, softer, more flexible skin. The eWell Puck’s unique technology optimizes cellular hydration. The eWell provides an infrared energy source essential to recharging the “water battery” within the body which is responsible for driving many metabolic functions.
Pain Relief: eWell Puck provides many users with significant pain relief. Pain, especially chronic pain, can be debilitating and significantly impact your quality of life. The eWell Puck offers a non-invasive solution, in part by reducing inflammation, and in part through influencing bio-energies, in ways similar perhaps to acupuncture and other mechanisms we don't completely understand.
Reduced Inflammation: It may be helpful to think of inflammation as pools of stagnating water in a ‘body’ of water that has lost its flow. The eWell, creating charge differential in water, increases the flow and circulation of fluids in the body.
Reduced Anxiety: The eWell Puck creates a real sense of calm and inner peace for many users. People say it feels peaceful like sunshine on your shoulders. In today’s fast-paced world, anxiety is a common struggle among increasing portions of our population.
Better Energy: eWell Puck users experience more strength, balance, focus, endurance, and freedom of movement. Energy levels are closely associated with better hydration, improved circulation, the distribution of essential nutrients, the expeditious removal of cellular waste, the proper functioning of the mitochondria and the production of ATP.
Physical Recovery: Whether you’re an athlete or someone recovering from an illness or injury, the eWell Puck aids in faster and more complete recovery. It promotes circulation, reduces inflammation, and provides the energy necessary for cellular repair.
EMF Protection and Blue Light Blocking: The negative impacts of our ever present electronic devices is not a trivial matter. The addition of Shungite in the eWell Puck blocks much of the negative nature of these technologies and allows us to use them with the confidence that we're protected. Prolonged exposure to non native blue light and EMF's from screens, cell phones, smartphones and smart watches, WiFi, 5G and microwaves impedes or drains the ‘water battery’ and is likely to be a significant cause of dehydration.
Easy Integration into Daily Life
The eWell Puck is designed with convenience in mind. Its compact and wearable form allows you to have it on your person wherever you go, ensuring that you receive a continuous energy input throughout your day. Simply wear the eWell Puck attached to your clothing, or place it in your pocket, and experience the benefits of enhanced well-being no matter where you are.
If you are using eWell Puck on a pet, it can attach to the collar or harness.
Ground your eWell and yourself!
Better Hydration
The eWell Puck employs unique technology to optimize cellular hydration. By providing an infrared energy source, it recharges the "water battery" within your body—an essential component for driving many metabolic functions.
- Visible Results: One of the first signs of improved hydration is smoother, softer, and more flexible skin, reflecting your body’s enhanced hydration status.
More Energy
Fatigue and low energy can significantly hinder your productivity and enjoyment of life. The eWell Puck is designed to boost your energy levels through:
- Enhanced Circulation: Improved hydration promotes better blood flow and the distribution of essential nutrients.
- Effective Waste Removal: The eWell Puck supports the efficient removal of cellular waste, ensuring your body operates at its best.
- Mitochondrial Health: By optimizing hydration, you support the proper functioning of mitochondria, leading to increased ATP production and sustained energy levels.
Stay Active, Feel Great
Don’t let dehydration slow you down. With the eWell Puck, you can fuel your body for optimal performance, enjoy increased energy, and achieve your goals—whether in the gym or daily life.
Study: Cellphone Radiation Causes Abnormal Blood Clumping in Just 5 Minutes, Study Finds
vigilantfox.com Guest post by Suzanne Burdick, Ph.D.
Article Source: https://www.vigilantfox.com/p/cellphone-radiation-causes-abnormal
Ultrasound imaging revealed that cellphone exposure caused a healthy woman’s blood cells to abnormally clump up, even when the cellphone was an inch away from her skin, according to a new peer-reviewed study published in Environment: Science and Policy for Sustainable Development.
A healthy woman’s blood cells formed abnormal clumps after just five minutes of having an idle cellphone placed on her leg. The same thing happened when researchers held the cellphone an inch away from the woman’s body, according to a peer-reviewed study published April 23 in Environment: Science and Policy for Sustainable Development.
Using ultrasound, the researchers showed that the woman’s blood cells developed a rouleaux formation, an abnormal red blood cell pattern in which the cells stack together in long rows like piles of coins, according to MyHematology.com.
Dr. Robert Brown, the study’s author, said that although the impact of rouleaux formation on health is not well understood, it’s “not without potential health consequences.”
Brown is a diagnostic radiologist with more than 30 years of experience and the vice president of Scientific Research and Clinical Affairs for the Environmental Health Trust (EHT). He said:
“Because of the impact on gas exchange and increased blood viscosity due to clumping, it is possible rouleaux could account for the unusual uptick in once-uncommon disease processes and disorders increasing in our society over the past few decades, including hypertension, obesity, diabetes, strokes, particularly in the younger population, and others.”
According to Brown, the study is key to educating the medical community on how wireless radiation affects a person’s biological functioning.
“If we want to see a change in government regulations and a decrease in the indiscriminate usage of wireless technology, the allopathic medical community needs to become knowledgeable of the health effects of wireless communication radiation,” Brown said. “I believe this study has cracked the proverbial egg.”
Devra Davis, Ph.D., MPH, a toxicologist and epidemiologist who is founder and president emerita of the EHT, said, “This finding of clumping in the blood after only five minutes of direct cellphone exposure should give pause to all who keep phones close to their bodies.”
The EHT is a nonprofit research and education group focused on the effects of wireless radiation.
Researchers repeated the experiment several times
For the data in this study, Brown and his colleague, Barbara Biebrich, an ultrasound technologist, did an initial experiment including an ultrasound scan of the leg vein of a 62-year-old asymptomatic woman with no history of allergy, blood disorder or systemic disease.
Next, they placed an idle Apple iPhone XR cellphone on the back of her knee for five minutes. The phone was connected to AT&T’s mobile network with its Wi-Fi, Bluetooth and cellular antennas turned on. However, the phone didn’t make calls or send texts, or receive calls or texts, while placed on the back of her knee.
After five minutes, the researchers did another ultrasound. The second ultrasound showed that cellphone radiation caused the blood cells in the woman’s popliteal vein, located behind the knee, to clump in rouleaux formation.
Brown and Biebrich repeated their experiment with the same woman multiple times over three months. “Each time, we encountered the same results,” Brown wrote.
On one occasion, the woman’s blood cells were already in rouleaux formation before having the cellphone placed on her knee for five minutes.
“Although we were initially perplexed,” Brown wrote, “I asked the participant where she had kept her cellphone just before the scan, and she replied that it had been in her pocket.”
The researchers also altered the experiment by placing the cellphone an inch away from the woman’s skin, rather than placing it directly on her body. Again, they waited five minutes.
“She went into rouleaux, even with the cellphone exposure an inch away,” Brown wrote.
“By demonstrating rouleaux in a deep leg vein, the study confirms that the penetration and associated physiological effects of wireless radiation are not limited to the first few millimeters of skin, but do, in fact, occur deeper in the body,” Brown said.
This finding has “significant implications for safety,” he said.
The Federal Communications Commission’s safety exposure limits for wireless radiation are based on the assumption that the radiation can harm human health only at levels high enough to heat human tissue. Cellphones emit radiation at levels lower than that.
Many scientists, including Brown, say there’s evidence that non-thermal levels of wireless radiation may negatively affect human biology.
The study provides a “visible manifestation” that cellphone radiation at non-thermal levels has biological effects.
The study didn’t clarify what specific range of cellphone radiation frequencies, such as 4G or 5G, caused the blood to clump.
The cellphone was idle and not actively engaging a 4G or 5G network, beyond the usual “handshaking” communication that cellphones do with cell towers, Brown said.
‘I am quite certain our subject is not a unicorn’
In the experiment report, the researchers said they are planning a larger study to assess how prevalent cellphone radiation-induced rouleaux formation may be among the general population.
“Although the incidence of rouleaux formation following cellphone exposure is unknown, I am quite certain our subject is not a unicorn,” Brown said.
Ultrasound imaging is relatively inexpensive and popular, so it should be easy for other researchers to do follow-up studies, too, he added.
The researchers first published some of their results from using ultrasound to show that cellphone radiation induces abnormal blood clumping in a Feb. 10 peer-reviewed article in Frontiers in Cardiovascular Medicine.
The April study in the Environment journal restates much of the February report in Frontiers. However, the report in Frontiers did not include the results from holding the cellphone an inch away from the woman’s body because the researchers had not yet done that experiment.
Both reports are important because they target different audiences, according to Brown.
The Frontiers journal is a resource for the physician community, particularly cardiologists and cardiovascular surgeons, Brown explained. The Environment journal is geared for the “much broader environmental science community,” he said.