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NewswireToday - /newswire/ -
Albany, OH, United States, 10/03/2008 - The voice shows potential to identify harmful pathogens within the body and through corrective sound presentation make appropriate changes for health and wellness.
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If those who seek to control our lives actually manage to create a flu pandemic, the exposure could be monitored and ameliorated through established mathematical templates derived from the acoustic measurements of individuals suspected of contamination.
Government and medical authorities have been pushing vaccination and/or antibiotic measures that we already know have little or no efficacy and which could actually cause harm. With an annihilation threat as high as 40% for many populations, we need a way to stop the onslaught. It is imperative that all viable remedies reach the ears of the public.
A small Ohio biotech company, Sound Health, has quantified the anomalous vocal patterns and acoustic architecture associated with of biological function, disease process and environmental exposures.
To date, Sound Health has supported the costs of this research, but immediate funding for the expansion of systematic vocal profiling as a potential avenue to combat the expected epidemic needs to be vigorously applied. The risk to public health makes such funding mandatory. If the reported pandemic risks are authentic, our national freedom may depend on it.
As remarkable as this idea may seem, groundbreaking studies have shown that the acoustic parameters of the voice have the capacity to provide biometric information regarding states of health. BioOhio, a non-profit organization founded to build and accelerate bioscience research in Ohio, has recognized that vocal acoustic studies conducted by Sharry Edwards, MEd., have "brought a revolutionary idea to the forefront of the Bioscience Community." Preliminary studies completed by Edwards included vocal studies for exposures and susceptibility to invading pathogens.
Like any other contagion, the Avian Flu has an incubation period before actual symptoms occur. If exposure could be verified using vocal samples while the pathogen is still in its incubation stage, it is highly likely that destructive proteins created by the pathogen could be predicted and destroyed before they become destructive.
The genomic frequencies and linked proteins associated with the threatened bird flu pandemic have been decoded by Edwards and her team, but as yet there is no general structure in place to allow the public to use the procedure on a large scale.
Assuming that the exploratory investigations with resistant pathogens can be extrapolated, this research modality may provide a means to identify the frequency signatures of the current strains and the on-going mutations in a matter of minutes.
One of the most important projects being slated is the development of an on-line vocal sampling program that could gather research data by testing pathogen exposure. Using this method, strategically located centers throughout the world could systematically sample vocal patterns that would be reported to a central location.
Ultimately, this new bioscience could reverse the effects of the Avian Flu, and it could potentially reverse the effects of other pathogens that could negatively influence the quality of life for many Americans.
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