| Just today I was reading about a deadly bird flu in
Asia. Last month I went for my annual flu shot. Seems that
no matter where you turn people are talking about influenza or the flu.
Something endemic is native to a particular place or always to
be found in a particular region, such as certain diseases that neither
increase nor decrease but are simply always present there.
Something epidemic is prevalent and spreading rapidly in a
particular region or community, like a mild flu . However something
pandemic is omnipresent, spread over a huge area, to be
found everywhere - such as the Spanish Flu of 1918.
The source of the Spanish Flu Pandemic may never be known (it
probably came
from China as most flu strains do) but it was first officially recorded
in May 1918 in a sleepy resort town of San Sebastian on the coast
of Spain, thus the name Spanish Flu.
In fact, the flu had stuck British trenches in France in early 1918
and spread very quickly to the German trenches. But with the
squalid conditions and all the death in the trenches, who had time to
name a flu bug.
The Spanish Flu started to make its appearance in North America in
September of 1918 and when it had run its course by late 1919, an
estimated over 25
million people had been felled by the disease. (By comparison, 9.3
million soldiers died in the entire First World War.) It was wide
spread. It was found in large cities, small towns, rural areas and
even in the high north where entire Inuit communities were practically
wiped out.
People took to wearing masks and staying indoors. Even the
harsh Canadian winter temperatures could not stop the spread of the
Flu. The virus was different
in that it affected young adults, who are generally hardy enough to fight
off such infections, as well as the very young and very old.
This Flu was so virulent that doctors of the time did not even
classify it as an influenza as most influenzas are quite mild.
Some called it bronchopneumonia. Others thought that it might be a
strain of botulism or dengue fever.
There was no specific treatment for the Spanish Flu. Just as we
do today, bed rest, lots of fluids and antibiotics for any ancillary
infection. It had to run its course.
In the end no one knows how many lives were lost worldwide to Spanish
Flu. Estimates were between 20 and 100 million.
When I was very
young, my grandmother lived in Willowdale, a suburb of Toronto. I
remember at the end of her street there was a small cemetery. I
always wondered at the ages of the people that were buried there.
They were mostly young kids who had died in 1918/19... casualties of the
Spanish Flu.
16/03/2008 |