New Zealand Society of Genealogists THE FLU PANDEMIC THE GREAT FLU

Similar documents
Conflict of Interest and Disclosures. Research funding from GSK, Biofire

Influenza: The Threat of a Pandemic

Recent work on the NZ epidemiology of the 1918 pandemic & relevance to pandemic planning

The 1918 Flu Pandemic That Killed Millions

Five Features of Fighting the Flu


FREQUENTLY ASKED QUESTIONS ABOUT PANDEMIC FLU

Influenza: The past, the present, the (future) pandemic

INFLUENZA A VIRUS. Structure of the influenza A virus particle.

Presentation to Building Continuity conference. 5 May Steve Brazier Director of Emergency Management

PANDEMIC INFLUENZA: CURRENT THREAT AND CALL FOR ACTION. Kirsty Duncan PhD FSAScot

Influenza RN.ORG, S.A., RN.ORG, LLC

Peterborough County-City Health Unit Pandemic Influenza Plan Section 1: Background

Evolution of influenza

Pandemic Flu Scenario Workshop

Acute respiratory illness This is a disease that typically affects the airways in the nose and throat (the upper respiratory tract).

4/28/2013. The Ever-Evolving Flu p The 1918 Flu p. 617

Influenza. For young readers. - By Zoriana Krupa INFLUENZA 1

NZIS Symposium 8 Feb 2018 NEW ZEALAND FAMILIES IN THE 1918 INFLUENZA PANDEMIC

Emerging Infections: Pandemic Influenza. W. Paul Glezen

The Spanish Influenza Pandemic Of (Rochester Studies In Medical History) READ ONLINE

GOVERNMENT OF ALBERTA. Alberta s Plan for Pandemic Influenza

The Silent Killer. waking me up to go to school. I did not feel very well, so I told her I was sick, and I wanted to

In the United States, flu season runs from October to May, with most cases occurring between late December and early March.

Coming Flu By J.L. Greger READ ONLINE

Diagnosing and managing

rskills Progress Monitoring Test 2a

Emerging Respiratory Infections NZ Amanda McNaughton Respiratory Physician CCDHB Wellington

Pandemic Control Measures. Issue Date Japan Medical Association.

YOUR SEASONAL FLU GUIDE

Case Studies in Ecology and Evolution. 10 The population biology of infectious disease

The Demographic Impact of an Avian Flu Pandemic

PANDEMIC INFLUENZA IN THE WORKPLACE

LESSON 4.5 WORKBOOK. How do viruses adapt Antigenic shift and drift and the flu pandemic

Influenza. Gwen Clutario, Terry Chhour, Karen Lee

INFLUENZA (FLU) Cleaning to Prevent the Flu

Avian influenza Avian influenza ("bird flu") and the significance of its transmission to humans

H1N1 Influenza. Influenza-A Basics. Influenza Basics. April 1, History of Influenza Pandemics. April 1 September 25, 2009

Meningococcal. Disease. Know the. symptoms. Don t wait talk to your doctor or nurse

Key Facts About Influenza Flu Seasonal Influenza Flu People who have the flu often feel some or all of these signs and symptoms that usually start

Advisory on Plague WHAT IS PLAGUE? 19 October 2017

The Human Immune System. Video

In 1914, on June 28, Serb nationals assassinated the heir to the Austro-Hungarian throne, Archduke Franz Ferdinand.

We ll be our lifesaver. We ll get the flu vaccine.

influenzas and HealthandSafetyOntario.ca Human Influenza

IT S A LIFESAVER EVERY YEAR FLU CAUSES SEVERE ILLNESS AND DEATH. GET YOUR FLU VACCINE NOW. IF YOU ARE: worker

Pandemic lesson plan ITEMS. Teachers lesson plan. Student assignments. About pandemics. Real life stories. Pandemics: Be prepared.

Pandemic Influenza Communications Exercise

What is Influenza? Patricia Daly MD, FRCPC Medical Health Officer and Medical Director of Communicable Disease Control

INFLUENZA AND OTHER RESPIRATORY VIRUSES

News in Review December 2014 Teacher Resource Guide EBOLA: A Deadly Virus Outbreak

Evaluating the Economic Consequences of Avian Influenza (1) Andrew Burns, Dominique van der Mensbrugghe, Hans Timmer (2)

A conversation with Michael Osterholm on July 30, 2013 about pandemics

University of Colorado Denver. Pandemic Preparedness and Response Plan. April 30, 2009

Pandemic Influenza. Bradford H. Lee, MD Nevada State Health Officer. Public Health: Working for a Safer and Healthier Nevada

A Guide for Parents. Protect your child. What parents should know. Flu Information The Flu:

Outline. Origin and Biogeography of Human Infectious Disease. Advantages of virulence. Diseases differ in virulence. Serial passage experiments

Global Catastrophic Biological Risks

Lesson 2 Case Study: The 1918 Influenza Pandemic Factors Beyond the Biological that Influence the Spread of Disease

virus infectious severe sample praise isolate spreads expert

U.S. Human Cases of Swine Flu Infection (As of April 29, 2009, 11:00 AM ET)

PANDEMIC INFLUENZA PREPAREDNESS: STATE CHALLENGES

INFLUENZA. Rob Young (James. J. Reid) Faculty of Medicine University of Auckland (Otago)

Norwich and Pandemic Influenza Planning

Epidemiology Treatment and control Sniffles and Sneezes Mortality Spanish flu Asian flu Hong Kong flu The Swine flu scare

HS-LS4-4 Construct an explanation based on evidence for how natural selection leads to adaptation of populations.

Health and Diseases Managing the Spread of Infectious Diseases

We ll be our lifesaver. We ll get the flu vaccine.

Influenza: A Challenge?

Seasonal Influenza Vaccine

How to Become a Flu Fighter

Contents. Flu and Infectious Disease Outbreaks Business Continuity Plan

Influenza B viruses are not divided into subtypes, but can be further broken down into different strains.

VIROLOGY OF INFLUENZA. Subtypes: A - Causes outbreak B - Causes outbreaks C - Does not cause outbreaks

PANDEMIC PREPAREDNESS PLAN

100 Years Since 1918: Are We Ready for the Next Pandemic?

How to Manage the Flu! Prevention of Disease Transmission in Canadian Workplaces. November Copyright 2007 The Canadian Red Cross Society

SEPSIS RESULTING FROM PNEUMONIA FILE

AVIAN FLU (LONG FORMAT) IBM Web Documentary Avian Flu (Long Format) OGILVY & MATHER

TABLE OF CONTENTS. Peterborough County-City Health Unit Pandemic Influenza Plan Section 1: Introduction

EVOLUTION: WHY DOES IT MATTER? What did evolution ever do for me?

Influenza. Giovanni Maciocia

Pandemic Flu: Preplanning for an Outbreak

A. No. There are no current reports of avian influenza (bird flu) in birds in the U.S.

Humanitarian Initiative to Prepare for a Pandemic Influenza Emergency (HIPPIE) Ron Waldman, MD Avian and Pandemic Influenza Unit USAID/Washington

PANDEMIC INFLUENZA PLAN

H1N1 influenza pandemic ( Spanish flu ) probably killed million people globally. Seasonal flu can cause ,000 deaths (WHO).

Lessons from past pandemics

The Influenza Epidemic of 1918

Outline. Not IF but WHEN: The Threat of Pandemic Influenza. Influenza History

RESPONDING TO AN INFLUENZA OUTBREAK

RESPIRATORY TRACT INFECTIONS. CLS 212: Medical Microbiology Zeina Alkudmani

Name: Class Period: Date:

Cancer Society of New Zealand. Development of a Survivorship Model in New Zealand Alexandra Leggat, Health Psychologist, Auckland Northland Division

Novel H1N1 Influenza A: Protecting the Public

The Cold, the Flu or INFLUENZA!

SHOULD VACCINES BE COMPULSORY?

How many students at St. Francis Preparatory School in New York City have become ill or been confirmed with swine flu?

KNOW MENINGOCOCCAL A PARENT S GUIDE TO UNDERSTANDING MENINGOCOCCAL DISEASE. Facts and advice you need to know to help protect your child

Is War Ever Justified?: A Bloody conflict webquest

Transcription:

New Zealand Society of Genealogists THE 1918-1919 FLU PANDEMIC THE GREAT FLU

World Wide Facts Killed more people than the Great war (20 30 Million people) Most devastating pandemic in recorded history One fifth of the worlds population was infected. Most deadly for those aged between 20 40

When did the pandemic begin? January February 1918 USA March Camp Funston(Kansas) thousands of soldiers affected USA soldiers spread the flu to France French army April British Army May July Gradually spread around the globe

What is influenza? Influenza is a viral infection of the respiratory tract (described by Hippocrates in 412 BC) The virus is very small, and has exceptional reproductive versatility Influenza is often confused with the common cold Pneumonia can be a serious complication of influenza

A Pandemic v an epidemic The key difference is one of scale and location A pandemic is when the same disease affects people at the same time in many countries around the world An epidemic is when a disease affects many people at the same time in a community, institution or country

What was the cause of this pandemic? Another example of different views: Was it from unprecedented numbers of young men brought together? Was it linked to troop ships / army camps / wide spread travel? Was it linked to crowds celebrating the end of the war?

What was the cause of this pandemic? Another example of different views: Was there a link to China? (bird flu)? Was it an antigenic drift - gradual and subtle variations in the evolution of the virus (why you need flu shots every year) Was it an antigenic shift sudden and major change genetic re-assortment.

Results of a Royal Commission of enquiry The cause was a virulent new infection introduced from overseas The Health Department was unprepared Quarantine restrictions were casual and unsatisfactory (unlike Australia) A major reorganisation of health administration resulted.

Why was it called Black Death? The membrane lining the lungs is damaged and blood/fluid fills the air spaces Oxygen exchange is reduced The skin loses its normal colour and turns a dusky purple This is called cyanosis The discolouration is an ominous sign and becomes even more pronounced after death

A young nun s story The nun was told to sit by a dying man She thought he was breathing normally ( a big strong healthy young man) until suddenly he gave a great gulp and before her very eyes, he turned jet-black, not blue or purple, but black like a Negro (page 24- Black November )

NZ Life in November 1918! Ordinary life was impossible Shops offices and factories shut down Schools hotels and theatres were closed Shipping came to a halt Shortages of basics Pressure on hospitals

Number of deaths (reference Black November by G W Rice) 8,573 people died North Island 4,051 South Island 2,040 High level of Maori deaths 2,160 Majority of European deaths were urban dwellers

Auckland The ship Niagara Red Cross, St John Ambulance Association, Army Medical corps Auckland hospital was overcrowded Victoria Park a temporary morgue Temporary influenza hospitals opened Largest death toll (1,128)

Waikumete cemetery memorial

Thames memorial to a nurse

Armistice day - Ida Reilly (Auckland telephone operator) As if by magic Queen Street just filled with people. It was one mass of laughing, crying, coughing and obviously sick people. Was it really the armistice or was it just a chance to get out of the house, even if I die, just let me see and hear people's voices again... the feeling of elation on the air that morning was just marvellous

Wellington There was a significant delay in preparing for this emergency(due to political wrangling especially between the Minister of Health and the Wellington Mayor) This lead to Wellington having the highest city death rate There was an acute shortage of Doctors and volunteer helpers

Wellington

Wellington Karori cemetery City Council workmen dug long trenches to cope with the extraordinary mortality Each burial separately marked and recorded Only two cremations as opposed to hundreds of burials (Cremations had to be specified in the deceased s Will)

Christchurch Linwood cemetery filled so rapidly it had to be closed Bromley cemetery new site Peak mortality 19 November (48 deaths)

Dunedin The least severe epidemic of New Zealand s four main cities Many unmarked flu epidemic graves at Dunedin s Anderson s Bay cemetery Peak mortality on 26 November (16 deaths) Some landlords evicted tenants who developed the flu

Anderson s Bay cemetery

Maori death rates Maori were seven times more likely than Europeans to die from the flu Maori settlements were totally unprepared A grim test of Maori and Pakeha relations resulted Dr Maui Pomare (MP for western Maori and Minister of Maori affairs played a major role Tahupotiki Wirimu Ratana began his healing ministry during the flu pandemic

Souviens! In two months New Zealand lost about half as many people to influenza as it had in the whole of the First World War. No event has killed so many New Zealanders in such a short time. While nearly every NZ town has a first world war memorial there are scarcely any public monuments to the victims of the worst modern disease disaster - overcome and forgotten.