öéèåè ðëúá áî÷åø òì éãé kaz öôéä áäåãòä
á÷åôú çåìéí éù òåã ãáøéí çåõ î÷åøåðä, åæä ìà çãù ùúåôñéí ãøò÷ ááéú çåìéí. àçã òí ùôòú, àçã òí àðâéðä, àçã ùçæø îàå÷øàéðä òí ççìú.. ëì îçìä åöåøåú ääòáøä ùìä.

àôùø âí ìäâéã ùìðñåò áðúéá éîéï åìàåúú æä ëôéä. ùëì àçã éòùä îä áà ìå ëì òåã äåà ìà ùí àçøéí áñéëåï.
àúä ùáåé á÷åðñôöéä ùâåéä îéñåãä åçáì.
úùàì àú òöîê àéê ëì äöååú äøôåàé ùáà áîâò òí ä"îçìåú" ìà ðäéä çåìä.
úùàì àú òöîê àéê áî÷åí äòáåãä àó àçã ìà áàîú "ðãá÷" îîéùäå ùáà ìòáåãä îúòèù.

úøùä ìé ùåá. áôòí äàìó! ìäôðåú àåúê ìðéñåé ùðòøê òì çééìéí áæîï "îâéôú" ä"ùôòú" äñôøãéú.
àí ÷ùä ìê úùúîù áâåâì èøðñìééè.
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC2862332/
https://hms.harvard.edu/magazine/pandemic/grip-disease

Under the auspices of the U.S. Public Health Service and the Navy, Rosenau and his colleagues, in an effort to “determine the mode of spread of influenza,” tried to infect military volunteers with Pfeiffer’s bacillus at a makeshift infirmary on Gallops Island in Boston Harbor. Though human experiments were then seen as acceptable, in a paper later published in JAMA, Rosenau noted that the team “proceeded rather cautiously at first by administering a pure culture” of the bacterium.
When the “trials proved negative,” he wrote, “we became bolder.” The scientists gave each of the volunteers “a very large quantity of a mixture of thirteen different strains of the Pfeiffer bacillus, some of them obtained recently from the lungs at necropsy.” They also inoculated the men with specimens taken from the throats and noses of influenza patients and later with the patients’ blood. Still no symptoms, so next the volunteers shook hands with, talked with, and were coughed on by the actively ill. They remained healthy.
àáì ìà! áåà ð÷ùéá ìàìøåòé ôøééñ, ìæø÷ò ñãö÷é èã èåãøåñ åùàø ðà3éí


÷àæ éù áê çåëîä àñéîôèåîèéú