INFLUENZA pandemic, 1918-1919INFLUENZA A virusGENOMESGLYCOPROTEINSHEMAGGLUTININNEURAMINIDASEThe article briefly summarizes scientific insights gained from studying the 1918 influenza virus and the implications of these findings for future pandemic planning. It mentions Influenza A viruses (IAV) ...
examined not only for its historical significance, but also for what we can learn (in the unfortunate chance the world experiences another influenza pandemic). This paper discusses some of the economic effects of the 1918 influenza pandemic in the United States. The first section discusses demo- ...
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15.The city as field hospital and the influenza epidemic in Seattle, USA, 1918–19 – Louisa Iarocci 16.Rural migrants, smallpox, and civic surgery in 20th-century Baghdad, Iraq – Huma Gupta 17.House, social Life, and smallpox in Kathmandu, Nepal, 1963 – Susan Heydon ...
issues related to modern racism, and examine the realities of environmental racism as related to social determinants of health through an African and/or Black American lens. All three forms of racism will be exemplified through a discussion of the 1918 influenza pandemic and surrounding events as ...
20 to 40. This pattern of death was unusual for influenza which usually killed the elderly and young children. It infected 28% of all Americans. An estimated 675,000 Americans died of influenza during thispandemic, about ten times as many as in World War 1. Of the U.S. soldiers who ...
We are arguably as vulnerable—or more vulnerable—to another pandemic as we were in 1918. Today top public health experts routinely rank influenza as potentially the most dangerous “emerging” health threat we face. Earlier this year, upon leaving his post as head of the Centers for Disease ...
The horrific scale of the 1918 influenza pandemic—known as the "Spanish flu"—is hard to fathom. The virus infected and killed at least 50 million worldwide, according to the CDC. That’s more than all of the soldiers and civilians killed during World War I combined. ...
After the discovery of influenza viruses, the 1918 pandemic was determined to have been caused by the influenza virus subtype designated A(H1N1) [4]. The next pandemic in 1957, caused by the “Asian” influenza A(H2N2) virus, was responsible for an estimated 600 deaths in New York State ...