The Spanish Influenza of 1918
100 Years Later the Story and the Factors That Affected the Deadliest Pandemic
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Narrated by:
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Ashton Haugen
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By:
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Mike Parson
About this listen
The 1918 Influenza pandemic moved around the world in three waves, infecting up to 500 million people and causing over 40 million deaths.
In areas that ended the pandemic with lower mortality rates than average, several things tended to be present. These include low rates of poverty, widespread access to healthcare, well-funded and widespread public health measures, and well-managed record-keeping. Areas that ended the pandemic with high rates of mortality tended to lack the above. They had high rates of poverty, access to healthcare was limited, public health measures were unfunded or ineffective, and record-keeping and communication were unreliable or unclear.
It is important to learn from the success and mistakes of nations in the past so that we, as a planet, are better prepared for any pandemics that should arise in the future. Being prepared involves high vaccination rates, fighting drug-resistant pathogens, and actively working to lower global poverty.
©2020 Sam Dickinson (P)2020 Sam Dickinson