History of Pandemic Flu

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In 2009 the World Health Organization released a statement that the world is in a post-pandemic state for H5N1. This is very interesting news so I thought why not go through the history of the flu and see how bad the pandemic could get this is what I found.
So H5N1 is highly pathogenic bird flu. It is caused by very serious outbreaks in domestic poultry. It occurs mostly in the Middle East and Asia. There is more than one type of H5N1, one is avian and one is swine. With avian there are little to none human accounts of contracting the disease but since 2003 there has been six-hundred-fifty cases in fifteen countries. About sixty percent of people who contract the disease die.
With the swine H5N1 the disease has a higher contraction rate in humans. In 1918 America nearly 675,000 people died. Worldwide about fifty million people died. The pandemic was called the Spanish flu. People could feel fine in the morning but die by nightfall. The mortality rate in healthy adults was alarming. The mortality rate was the highest in healthy adults for no known reason. The range of ages in this category is 20 to 50 years old. During this year long pandemic approximately 20% to 40% of the worldwide population became ill. These numbers were very alarming to many scientists. The symptoms were high fever (102 to 104), body aches, coughing, exhaustion, in some diarrhea and vomiting. There was also a difference in skin pigmentation. The spots covered the face few hours later the person infected died.
Since this pandemic there have been four more. One in 1957-1958 this pandemic was in the Far East. It was predicted. Vaccines were beginning production in late May of 1957. It was available in limited supply till august of the same year. The summer of...

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...some take a long time to hit. This is the reason some pandemics kill so many and leave little of the affected alive and perfectly healthy. Treatments and vaccines take a long time to make right and most do not have the time to keep on living. This is why pandemics can cause either little damage or leave a lot of carnage in their wake.
This is my research paper on the history of pandemic flus. I hope you had a good read.

Works Cited

"Black Death." History.com. A&E Television Networks. 22 Apr. 2014 .
"Pandemic Flu History." Home. 22 Apr. 2014 .
"Plague, Plague Information, Black Death Facts, News, Photos -- National Geographic." National Geographic. 23 Apr. 2014 .

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