GrummanBear
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Genuinely curious, as I hadn’t heard of it until a week ago...but for those born in the 40’s and 50’s, do they remember mass panic during the Asian Flu? It also came from China, spread worldwide, and targeted the elderly (ca 1957-1958). My understanding is the number of Americans who died (116,000) would be the equivalent of approximately 222,000 today (as a % of the population). I’m assuming they didn’t cancel life as they knew it(?)
Makes me wonder if history will judge us less by the ferocity of the virus and more by the intensity of our fear.
“As an entirely new strain there was no immunity in the populace and the first vaccines were not distributed until August in the US and October in the UK, and then on an extremely limited basis.
One GP recalled ‘we were amazed at the extraordinary infectivity of the disease, overawed by the suddenness of its outset and surprised at the protean nature of its symptomatology.’”
https://www.cdc.gov/flu/pandemic-resources/1957-1958-pandemic.html
Makes me wonder if history will judge us less by the ferocity of the virus and more by the intensity of our fear.
“As an entirely new strain there was no immunity in the populace and the first vaccines were not distributed until August in the US and October in the UK, and then on an extremely limited basis.
One GP recalled ‘we were amazed at the extraordinary infectivity of the disease, overawed by the suddenness of its outset and surprised at the protean nature of its symptomatology.’”
https://www.cdc.gov/flu/pandemic-resources/1957-1958-pandemic.html
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