the early sixties, i was sent by a sanitary-epidemiological mobile detachment to the city of sovetskaya gavanthe far east and worked. i am there tick-borne encephalitis for the population of the far east of siberia and a number of regions of the european part of tick-borne encephalitis represented a large threat. here once in the sixty-second year in the journal science and life. i read what i can say outraged. the sun affects the infection even on cast iron, which outbreaks of disease and epidemics are supposedly dependent on solar activity. it was an article. i wrote to him expressing my doubts, and in response i received data on solar activity. and imagine when i overlaid my swing charts. then both of these lines coincided, our first meeting with izhevsk almost ended in a quarrel, of course, the sun affects our lives, but not to the same extent. how diseases can depend on solar activity, as a practitioner i could not agree with such conclusions, but alexander leonidovich calmly began to tell me in detail how he came to such conclusions, it was clear that he had already had to do. this is n