Woman Allergic To Both Cold And Heat Predicts Her Electricity Bills By 525 Percent

“We were paying 48 pounds [$58] a month and then it went up to 60 pounds [$72].”

<p>Sam Newland, 50, shows that each radiator in the house is set to 30 degrees on February 25, 2022. Newland is allergic to both cold and hot temperatures and has to have her heating on a constant 30 degrees in winter. (Leila Coker, SWNS/Zenger)</p>

A woman with an allergy to the cold and heat says maintaining a perfect temperature in her home will see her bills shoot up by 525 percent.

Sam Newland, 50, has cold urticaria and develops rashes and painful welts on her skin when she gets cold.

Not only is there no cure, but the same symptoms are triggered by sweat.

She has to have her heating on a constant 30 degrees in winter – but keep fans on constantly around her home during hot weather.

During the recent heatwave, she has has to sleep with a fan above her bed due to keep her rashes at bay.

Newland, a PA, from Stevenage, Herefordshire, in the United Kingdom, said her electricity bills from So Energy used to be 48 British pounds ($58) a month, and crept up to 60 pounds ($72) – but now she’s been told they could reach 300 pounds ($361) a month.

Sam Newland, 50, shows her skin in a flared-up condition, caused by her allergy, in an undated photo. Newland is allergic to both cold and hot temperatures and has to have her heating on a constant 30 degrees in winter. (Leila Coker, SWNS/Zenger)

She said: “I have fans on all over my house as it’s too hot at the moment that my sweat is causing the rashes and it’s really painful.

“I can’t win- I have to have my heating on all the time during the winter and now I’m paying out loads to keep fans on to keep me cool in the summer.

“We were paying 48 pounds [$58] a month and then it went up to 60 pounds [$72] and now we’ve been predicted it could be 300 pounds [$361] a month.

“It’s bonkers and it’s not my fault that my body can’t cope with extreme heat or cold.

“This spike is worrying enough for us, so I’d hate how other people are feeling.”

Newland has suffered from cold urticaria since moving back to the U.K. from Singapore when she was just 13.

Doctors initially had no idea why she was developing rashes and welts and it took two years for them to diagnose the cause as an allergy to cold temperatures.

Unfortunately, there is no cure for cold urticaria, and due to the heatwave she has suffered the same symptoms caused by sweat.

Newland is only able to manage her condition with antihistamine while trying to keep her body at a warm temperature in the winter and cool in the Summer.

She has flare-ups every few days and set about trying to find treatments to help her condition.

Symptoms – including itching all over and ‘huge red spots’ – can be triggered by all sorts of cold weather, including damp or humid days and even just sitting on a brick wall.

Since diagnosis she has tried multiple antihistamine brands – settling on a supermarket’s own brand of Benadryl in her early 20s.

For other sufferers she recommends trying a variety of antihistamines to find what works for them.

Sam Newland, 50, shows off the antihistamines that she uses to control the itching caused by her allergy on February 25, 2022. Newland is allergic to both cold and hot temperatures and has to have her heating on a constant 30 degrees in winter. (Leila Coker, SWNS/Zenger)

“I take three a day and that is the best thing that helps,” she said.

“It’s been so warm that the sweat is running down my neck and back and causing the itchy blotches.

“I have fans on all round the house and one above my bed when I got to sleep.

“I haven’t even looked at the smart meter to see how much I am spending or using.

“I’m too scared.”

Newland, who lives with her husband, Andy, 60, a print finisher, already saw her heating bills soar to 60 pounds ($72) a month.

“It’s terrifying,” she said.

“I have to use fans to keep my symptoms at bay and come the winter I’ll have my heating hiked up.

“It will get to the point where my husband and I will be then choosing between eating or filling up the car to get to work.

“We live in the middle of nowhere so we rely on our care.

“We’re on comfortable salaries so it’s scary that we’re facing this.

“I’d hate to think how people worse off than us are feeling.”

Produced in association with SWNS.