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Related: Editorials & Other Articles, Issue Forums, Alliance Forums, Region ForumsWhy the 1918 Flu Pandemic ("Spanish Flu") Never Really Ended
If you ever wondered what happened with the Spanish Flu pandemic, which actually started in Kansas, the truth is that it never went away, and the same is likely going to be the case with COVID given that it has spread all over the world and continues to mutate. This is why long term, the only real answer is for as many people as possible to get vaccinated.
https://www.history.com/news/1918-flu-pandemic-never-ended
An unthinkable more than 50 million people worldwide died from the 1918-1919 flu pandemic commonly known as the Spanish Flu. It was the deadliest global pandemic since the Black Death, and rare among flu viruses for striking down the young and healthy, often within days of exhibiting the first symptoms. In the United States, the 1918 flu pandemic lowered the average life expectancy by 12 years.
Whats even more remarkable about the 1918 flu, say infectious disease experts, is that it never really went away. After infecting an estimated 500 million people worldwide in 1918 and 1919 (a third of the global population), the H1N1 strain that caused the Spanish flu receded into the background and stuck around as the regular seasonal flu.
But every so often, direct descendants of the 1918 flu combined with bird flu or swine flu to create powerful new pandemic strains, which is exactly what happened in 1957, 1968 and 2009. Those later flu outbreaks, all created in part by the 1918 virus, claimed millions of additional lives, earning the 1918 flu the odious title of the mother of all pandemics.
Since the whole world had been exposed to the virus, and had therefore developed natural immunity against it, the 1918 strain began to mutate and evolve in a process called antigenic drift. Slightly altered versions of the 1918 flu reemerged in the winters of 1919-1920 and 1920-1921, but they were far less deadly and nearly indistinguishable from the seasonal flu. The 1918 flu definitely lost its real virulence by the early 1920s, says Taubenberger.
Whats even more remarkable about the 1918 flu, say infectious disease experts, is that it never really went away. After infecting an estimated 500 million people worldwide in 1918 and 1919 (a third of the global population), the H1N1 strain that caused the Spanish flu receded into the background and stuck around as the regular seasonal flu.
But every so often, direct descendants of the 1918 flu combined with bird flu or swine flu to create powerful new pandemic strains, which is exactly what happened in 1957, 1968 and 2009. Those later flu outbreaks, all created in part by the 1918 virus, claimed millions of additional lives, earning the 1918 flu the odious title of the mother of all pandemics.
Since the whole world had been exposed to the virus, and had therefore developed natural immunity against it, the 1918 strain began to mutate and evolve in a process called antigenic drift. Slightly altered versions of the 1918 flu reemerged in the winters of 1919-1920 and 1920-1921, but they were far less deadly and nearly indistinguishable from the seasonal flu. The 1918 flu definitely lost its real virulence by the early 1920s, says Taubenberger.
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Why the 1918 Flu Pandemic ("Spanish Flu") Never Really Ended (Original Post)
TomCADem
Jan 2022
OP
mitch96
(13,924 posts)1. I am so fortunate that my parents did not get that flu. Both were children during that time
I wish they were still around so I could ask them about what happened during that time...
m
katmondoo
(6,457 posts)2. My granfather died from that Flu in 1918
Changed my mothers life. She had to leave school to care for younger siblings.