In November, many were afraid of geomagnetic storms, and the most impressionable clutched their hearts and heads.
Some scientists and doctors do not call susceptibility to such storms a disease, but do not deny that there are certain symptoms.
A certain group of people claim that on such days the pressure rises sharply, and the head and joints begin to hurt.
Some professors believe that the body perceives geomagnetic disturbances as stress and the older a person is, the more difficult it is for him to survive storms.
An experiment was conducted where patients were exposed to geomagnetic storms for a long time. This caused red blood cells to clump and blood flow to deteriorate.
However, evidence-based medicine does not currently confirm the impact of magnetic storms on public health.
Some doctors note that the magnetic storm itself does not affect the human body in any way.
But it affects atmospheric pressure, which in turn affects people.