I doubt it would do anything.
>Spanish flu started in the United States, at the Naval Radio School of Cambridge, Massachusetts, with 400 initial cases.
>"This epidemic rapidly spread to 1,127 soldiers at Funston Camp (Kansas), where wireless connections had been installed.
What intrigued the doctors was that while 15% of the civilian population were suffering from nosebleeds, 40% of the Navy suffered from them."
>"It can be seen that each new influenza pandemic corresponds to a new advance in
electrical technology, such as the Asian flu of 1957-58, following the installation of a
powerful radar surveillance system, and the outbreak of Hong Kong flu from July 1968 onwards, following the commissioning of 28 military satellites for space surveillance at the altitude of the Van Allen belts, which protect us from cosmic radiation."
From "The Invisible Rainbow: A History of Electricity and Life" by Arthur Firstenberg