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Influenza Epidemic 1918 - 1919
Flu
1918 Flu Epidemic
Dan Bjarnason and Robin Rowland, CBC News Online
Influenza has been one of the great mass killers in human history and
its most lethal version was the Spanish flu epidemic in the fall of
1918.
At least 21 million people died worldwide, more than were killed in
the fighting in the First World War. (Some historians say that large
numbers of flu deaths went unreported in less developed countries.
Recent research has shown that as many as 20 million people could have
died in India, raising the death toll to between 40 million and 50
million.)
Soldiers returning home from the trenches at war's end didn't come
back alone. They brought with them the flu virus. By the time it had run
its course, 50,000 Canadians were dead. Some smaller villages in Quebec
and Labrador were almost wiped out.
In the United States, 675,000 people died in the epidemic.
People today tend to think of the flu as an uncomfortable
inconvenience. Then it was a serial killer that seemed to its victims to
be some form of curse. Medical facilities were swamped. The killer flu
struck quickly and inexplicably. Some people would go to bed healthy and
never wake up.
Although the flu normally kills the very young and the very old, this
epidemic was most virulent among those aged 20 to 40.
Doctors and hospitals in North America were already overtaxed by the
war, with many health care workers overseas and local hospitals caring
for evacuated wounded. Volunteers stepped forward to help. No one knows
how many became victims themselves.
Canadian streets had an eerie look. Almost everyone
who went outdoors wore a face mask. Today's scenes of masks in the
street would not be out of place in the terrified Canada of the fall of
1918.
People in closed communities were most vulnerable, the flu spread
rapidly through U.S. army camps filled with men who had not deployed
overseas. It was reported that 500 prisoners at San Quentin Penitentiary
in California were affected.
In some communities, it was a criminal offence to shake hands.
Gatherings of more than six people were banned. Schools, theatres and
other public buildings were closed. In the U.S., railways demanded
passengers have a document certifying they were free of the flu.
American studies show that flu killed more poor people than rich,
especially since many of the poor were living in crowded conditions that
made transmission easy.
Back then, it would take a year for such a virus to
make its way around the world. Although the virus probably originated in
China, as do most flu virus variants, this flu appeared first in the
British trenches on the Western Front in April 1918, then among German
forces a few days later, then among French troops; it was thought the
disease was caused by the horrible conditions of trench warfare.
It was called the Spanish flu because it was first officially noticed
in Spain in May 1918. It went on to kill an estimated eight million
people there.
The virus was tracked along international shipping lanes, from Europe
to North America, then to Asia, Africa, Brazil and eventually the South
Pacific.
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