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10 Μαρ 2020 · The 1918 Spanish flu killed up to 50 million people around the world and has been called “the mother of all pandemics”. A U.S. Army camp hospital in Aix-Les-Baines France during World War I. It is estimated that 20 percent – 40 percent of U.S. soldiers and sailors were ill, primarily from influenza virus, during the height of the war ...
10 Απρ 2018 · Gathered here are images from the battle against one of the deadliest events in human history, when the flu killed up to 6 percent of the Earth’s population in just over a year.
12 Φεβ 2020 · The 1918 influenza pandemic, also known as the Spanish flu, was the deadliest epidemic in world history. An estimated 500 million worldwide were infected, and the death toll was anywhere from between 20 to 100 million. Influenza, or flu, is a virus that attacks the respiratory system.
Included below is a fantastic collection of pictures from the deadly 1918 Spanish flu pandemic, including tent hospitals, people wearing preventative masks, a sick child, no spitting signs, and much more.
In terms of the total numbers of deaths, it was among the most devastating pandemics in human history. It is also called the Spanish influenza pandemic or Spanish flu, because the disease was widely reported in Spain early in the pandemic.
5 Μαΐ 2020 · Photos from the 1918 Spanish flu pandemic. By Jessica Learish. Updated on: May 5, 2020 / 3:28 PM EDT / CBS News. Sam Hood/State Library of New South Wales. The spring of 2020 saw millions of...
16 Οκτ 2018 · According to the CDC, the pandemic was so severe that it actually lowered US life expectancy by about 12 years, with men living an average age of 36.6 years and women approximately 42.2 years. Today, this pandemic is known as the Spanish flu, though this name is entirely misleading.