1918 pandemic us deaths

    • [DOCX File]ALEX | Alabama Learning Exchange

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      Spanish Flu Pandemic of 1918. Bibliography. The Flu Pandemic. Alabama Public Health 1918 Flu Outbreak: http://www.alabamapublichealth.gov/pandemicflu/history-of-1918 ...


    • [DOC File]1918 Pandemic Influenza in Maine

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      The years preceding the pandemic, 3% of deaths from influenza were in this age group. Although one well known book on the 1918 pandemic reports northern Maine as having escaped the effects of this event, Department of Health reports and area newspapers from the time confirm Aroostook County with the highest reported death rate in Maine.


    • [DOC File]WORST DISASTERS – LIVES LOST (U

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      Wayne Blanchard, Ph.D., CEM, FEMA Emergency Management Higher Education Project. July 5, 2006 Draft. Influenza Pandemic, September 1918 – April 1919 -- 675,000


    • [DOC File]WORST DISASTERS – LIVES LOST (U

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      Wayne Blanchard, Ph.D., CEM, FEMA Emergency Management Higher Education Program Manager. September 21, 2008 Update. Influenza Pandemic, September 1918 – April 1919 ...


    • [DOC File]The Economic Impact of Pandemic Influenza in the United ...

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      Influenza pandemics have occurred for centuries, three times (1918, 1957, and 1968) in the 20th century alone. Another pandemic is highly likely, if not inevitable. In the 1918 influenza pandemic, more than 20 million people died. Improvements in medical care and technology since the last pandemic may reduce the impact of the next.


    • [DOC File]In the last days of 2003, WHO received ... .us

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      During the previous century, the pandemic that began in 1918 caused at least 40 million deaths worldwide. The one that began in 1957 was milder, causing more than 2 million deaths. The one that began in 1968 was even milder, causing around 1 million deaths. Neither the timing nor the severity of the next pandemic can be predicted.


    • [DOC File]The Spanish Flu’ (1918-1919)

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      The deaths attributed to WW 1 were estimated to be 20 million and this was over 4 years. The Spanish Flu is estimated to have claimed over 100 million lives! And this was in an 18 month period from 1918 to 1919. Whereas the First World War casualties were mainly in Europe—the Spanish Flu was world wide.


    • [DOC File]CDC – Phase 6 Talking Points - Connecticut

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      The 1918 pandemic killed tens of millions of people. The 1957 pandemic is thought to have resulted in at least 70,000 deaths in the United States. Deaths from the 1968-69 pandemic were about the same as for seasonal influenza. This pandemic certainly poses the potential to be at least as serious as seasonal flu, if not more so.


    • [DOC File]Pandemic Influenza

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      118* Why do US pandemic planning scenarios, which estimate between 89,000 and 207,000 deaths from a flu pandemic, rely on “best-case” assumptions about the likely outcome, when the 1918 pandemic killed about 500,000 in a much smaller population, and the bird flu virus appears (so far) to be more deadly than even the 1918 strain?


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