To quarantine or not to quarantine.... |
Why the "Spanish" Flu? Apparently censorship in many countries involved in the Great War, e.g. Great Britain, the U.S., Germany, and France minimized early reports in order to protect morale, whereas in neutral Spain, the media reported on the pandemic more freely. People thus assumed Spain was harder hit and hence the name.
In Spain they called it the "Naples Soldier" which was taken from a musical operetta titled La canción del olvido (The Song of Forgetting).
Such a tragedy, the Great War ended in November, 1918, but one could argue that the conditions (destroyed infrastructure, overcrowded camps, general mayhem) it created helped propagate the virus that kept on killing for another 2 years. There were two waves of the pandemic, the second even deadlier than the first, but by December 1920, it was over.
Happy 2018.
See 1918 flu pandemic for more details
This year it's the dog flu.
ReplyDeletehttps://www.acsh.org/news/2018/01/02/some-bad-flu-news-h3n2-major-player-year-12350
Dog flu? I'm not very informed, but H3N2 is a sub-type that can infect birds and mammals other than humans, yeah? So was flu among dogs really bad this year?
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