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Liverpool Echo
Liverpool Echo
World
Amy Reast & Aaliyah Rugg

Mum who is allergic to the cold faces heating bills as large as her mortgage

A woman who has an allergy to the cold is worried for the coming months as energy bills are set to skyrocket.

Robyn Harrison first began experiencing allergic reactions after having her son, Zachary, six. She would come out in hives after going out in the cold, getting out the shower, or grabbing frozen food in the supermarket, and initially put it down to hormones.

But after going to an air show on a particularly windy day, her eyes and cheeks swelled up so much she could barely see. Eventually, five years ago she was diagnosed with cold urticaria and aqua urticaria - allergy to cold water.

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The 35-year-old struggles to do basic things such as holding a cold can of pop and she needs the heating on whenever the temperatures drop below 23 degrees. As a result, with the growing energy price hikes, this could mean her heating bills are set to be the same as her entire mortgage.

The mum-of-one from Blackpool said: "We have the heating on for at least eight months in the year. After March that'll cost us the same as our mortgage.

Robyn needs the heating on most of the year due to an allergy to the cold (Robyn Harrison / SWNS)

"We're definitely worrying about what we'll do after March. There will be more outgoing costs in petrol when winter comes as well, because I can't walk anywhere in the cold without having an allergic reaction.

"When I'm cold, my whole body becomes insanely itchy and my eyes get so swollen that I can barely open them, so reducing the heating isn't an option. We're getting to the point where we're just about managing. We have no idea what to do."

Currently, she and her partner Andrew Temple, 37, are on a fixed-rate energy tariff of £250 per month, but that expires in March. They've been told their new tariff will be double that amount, which means their monthly bills to cover the costs of Robyn's condition will match their £500 mortgage payments.

Robyn Harrison and her partner Andrew Temple (Robyn Harrison / SWNS)

Robyn, who works full-time as a housekeeper on a hospital ward, added: "Even spraying deodorant on my underarms would make my skin crawl. It's itchy. It doesn’t hurt but it makes your whole body really itchy and you can't get rid of it. It makes me so stressed.

"It can last a couple of days if it's a particularly bad reaction. I wrap up, but it's not possible to completely cover yourself. Even if just my eyes are showing, or the tiny gap at your wrist between your coat and gloves, I'll react."

The mum takes three antihistamine tablets each day but says she still suffers frequent reactions. The family even bought an extra car to avoid her having to walk anywhere, and their heating is on whenever temperatures drops below 23 degrees.

But with the cost of living crisis, petrol and energy are two of the worst-hit bills for families. Robyn said: "It's a massive concern, not just with gas and electric, but with everything.

"It's getting to the point where we're just about managing. We do both have jobs so we're in a better position than some, but we are worrying what we will do after March. Everyone else must be feeling the same, but what do we do?"

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