QUOTE
Today, she still is prone to hot flashes and dizzy spells as the residual electricity makes its way outside her body.
I'm glad that she survived and that her young son had the presence of mind to summon help in the proper way, but that statement by the reporter, or whoever the reporter is quoting, is simply ridiculous. No doubt Kimberly is still feeling the effects of the damage caused to her body, and that kind of injury can take a very long time to heal (I once took a 480 hit that hurt for nearly a year afterward) but there isn't any such thing as "residual electricity" to make its way outside her body.
Its not that I expect the public to understand electricity on the same level as those of us who work with it, but can't we at least get our public education level up just a little? Its dismaying to see a statement like that in a news article that was probably written by a college educated journalist.
