What ended the spanish flu pandemic

    • [DOCX File]National Pandemic Influenza Preparedness Plan

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      The first pandemic of influenza of the 20th century, the “Spanish flu,” began in 1918 and, by the time it ended the following year, by conservative estimates, it had resulted in more than 20 million deaths worldwide. Later pandemics in 1957 and 1968 caused far fewer deaths but still posed a substantial burden on the health care system, and ...


    • Home - Inner West Council

      No, not a description of May 2020 but of 7th February, 1919. A global pandemic of pneumonic influenza, also known as Spanish flu, had reached Australian shores in early January. It came home with the returning troops from World War One. …


    • [DOC File]SOCIALS 11

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      Spanish Flu Pandemic of 1918. During the winter of 1918-1919 a deadly influenza virus swept across Europe, killing millions. Many returning soldiers unknowingly brought the virus home to Canada. Young people were especially susceptible. An estimated 21 million people died worldwide; from 1918-1929 approximately 50,000 Canadians died in the ...


    • Spanish Flu - Symptoms, How It Began & Ended - HISTORY

      Oct 12, 2010 · The Spanish flu pandemic of 1918, the deadliest in history, infected an estimated 500 million people worldwide—about one-third of the …


    • [DOC File]Centers for Disease Control and Prevention

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      The emergence of the highly pathogenic avian influenza A (H5N1) among humans throughout South and Southeast Asia and Eastern Europe[1] , and the potential for a new global pandemic of H5N1 or another influenza subtype, highlight the immediate need to identify risk factors for influenza transmission in low-income settings and to assess the ...


    • [DOCX File]Mary Baldwin University in Staunton, Virginia

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      In late 2005, the World Health Organization and the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) began in earnest to alert the world’s countries to the possibility of a pandemic flu outbreak on a scale similar to that of the Spanish Flu of 1918. …


    • [DOC File]July 17, 2009 FEMA Emergency Management Higher …

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      The H1N1 virus that sparked the Spanish flu of 1918-1919 circulated in swine and humans well before the pandemic started, and it did not come directly from birds as previously thought, they added. Instead, it was probably generated by genetic …


    • [DOC File]1918 Pandemic Influenza in Maine

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      The need for women during WWI and the pandemic may have contributed to the passage of the right of women to vote. Indeed, the U.S. Congress finally ratified the 19th amendment to the constitution, granting women the right to vote in the spring of 1919, just after both the war and the pandemic ended.


    • [DOCX File]Otterbein Grammar

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      The deadly “Spanish flu” claimed more lives than World War I, which ended the same year the pandemic struck. Now, new research is placing the flu’s emergence in a forgotten episode of World War I: the shipment of Chinese laborers across Canada in sealed train cars.


    • [DOC File]Precautions for H1N1

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      The word pandemic is often used when speaking of the spreading of a flu virus. There have been three pandemics in the past: the Spanish flu, the Asian flu, and the Hong Kong flu (Swine, 2009). A pandemic usually occurs in a wave, or a series of waves.


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