Us death toll from spanish flu

    • [DOC File]Instructor Notes for Unit 2 - FEMA

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      Just as has been the case in previous pandemics, the actual death toll of the 1918-19 influenza pandemic is not precisely known. Historians and epidemiologists are comfortable with the assertion that over 500,000 people died of the disease in the United States, but an exact number will never be known.


    • [DOC File]Alexandria Pandemic Flu Mass Fatality Plan

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      A death that meets criteria for an emerging infection and needs to be confirmed by culture of blood and tissues. This includes the first “native” cases of pandemic flu in Virginia. Illness and death in a poultry worker where illness is suspected as flu to confirm flu …


    • [DOC File]Lesson 1 > The Virgin Field > Step 1

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      The Spanish Flu, or La Grippe, killed somewhere between 20 and 40 million people worldwide. In America alone, 28% of the population was infected with the virus, the vast majority of whom where between the ages of 20 and 40.


    • [DOC File]1918 Pandemic Influenza in Maine

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      Besides pneumonia, the other leading associated causes of death were pregnancy, tuberculosis, and heart disease. Indeed, newspaper reports across Maine noted the tragic association of pregnancy and death from influenza. The death rate from influenza in the preceding years ranged from 1 to 6 per 10,000. In 1918, that death rate was 32.


    • [DOC File]Preparation for Pandemic Influenza in Oshkosh and ...

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      We are unsure of the death toll as a result of an avian influenza pandemic; however, we can predict that there will be an increase in deaths in Winnebago County. In 2004, Winnebago County had a total of 1247 deaths4,5. The break down of death …


    • [DOCX File]Home | FEMA.gov

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      The highest death toll annually for West Nile in the U.S. was 284 people. Seasonal influenza kills between 3,000 and 56,000, but West Nile was getting more funding. So to the extent that you have any political juice tell your representatives, put the money where it could do some good.


    • [DOC File]Econ of Disasters – Unit Introduction

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      The Spanish Flu. Dates: March, 1918 – June, 1919. Type: Pandemic influenza. The name, Spanish flu, comes from the highly publicized death toll in Spain. Spain was not involved in the war and newspaper coverage of the epidemic was not suppressed there as …


    • University of Wisconsin System

      The death rates from the Spanish Influenza Pandemic of 1918 in Milwaukee and Eau Claire were both quite small. Eau Claire ranked into category 1 while Milwaukee was only a category 2. Milwaukee was the largest city in Wisconsin at this time, so if the number of deaths were to only be based on demographics then Milwaukee should have been at ...


    • [DOC File]HOW WHAT IS UNFOLDING HAS ONLY TO DO WITH …

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      And quite undeniably, the Common Flu was indeed out there. Then the Zionists coerced white-coats into certifying every death (even from being run over by truck, or shot in the head) as a COVID death. But that fraud stopped working after the Common Flu death-toll was shown to have dropped from 2018 to 2019.


    • [DOCX File]Seasonal Influenza Risk Communication Toolkit

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      Oct 13, 2016 · Every flu season is different, and influenza can affect people differently. Even healthy children and adults can get very sick from the flu and spread it to others. Over a period of 30 years, between 1976 and 2006, CDC estimates of flu-associated deaths in the United States range from a low of about 3,000 to a high of about 49,000 people.


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