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1 Lessons from the past: How the deadly second wave of the 1918 ‘Spanish flu’ caught Dallas and the U.S. by surprise Health concerns about the 2020 coronavirus pandemic are rooted in the catastrophic second wave of the 1918 pandemic, which hit between September and November of that year. By David Tarrant 9:00 AM on Jul 3, 2020 https://www.dallasnews.com/news/2020/07/03/lessons-from-the-past-how-the-deadly-second- wave-of-the-1918-spanish-flu-caught-dallas-and-the-us-by-surprise/ Illustration by staff artist Michael Hogue.(Michael Hogue / Michael Hogue illustration) As August gave way to September of 1918, few people were thinking about the influenza that would soon sweep across Texas and the rest of the country with the speed and deadly ferocity of a firestorm. There had been a relatively mild version of the virus in the spring of that year, mostly affecting troops mobilizing to go off to World War I over in Europe. But by summer the disease known at the time as the Spanish flu had been largely forgotten. The front pages of The Dallas Morning News were dominated by news of American troops pouring into Europe for what would come to be known as World War I. But that would quickly change. By the end of September, a second wave of the flu, far deadlier, would sweep across the country, hitting Dallas and other large cities hard. When health experts worry about the course of the 2020 coronavirus pandemic, they often look back at the second wave of the 1918 pandemic, between September and November, https://www.dallasnews.com/author/david-tarrant 2 when influenza cases overwhelmed hospitals and medical staffs across the country and the dead piled up faster than they could be buried. In Dallas that year, the city’s chief health officer, A.W. Carnes, waved off the fast- approaching pandemic as not much more than the common cold. In a major blunder, he permitted a patriotic parade in late September that attracted a cheering crowd of thousands jammed together downtown. Cases of influenza promptly spiked. The second wave would produce most of the deaths of the pandemic, which experts now estimate at 50 million to 100 million worldwide. In the United States, 675,000 people died from the virus. The Dallas Morning News on Sept. 27, 1918, reported the rapid spread of the Spanish flu. Despite the worsening conditions, Dallas medical officials hesitated to impose restrictions on public gatherings for more than two weeks. As it did then, the world is struggling with a virus for which there is no vaccine. COVID-19, the sickness caused by the new coronavirus, has advanced unabated around the world since it first appeared in China late last year. By the end of June, the number of deaths worldwide exceeded 500,000. Like the Spanish flu in 1918, the new coronavirus isn’t showing signs of fading away anytime soon. Texas ended June with alarm lights flashing as new COVID-19 cases set records daily ...
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1 Lessons from the past: How the deadly second wave of the 1918 ‘Spanish flu’ caught Dallas and the U.S. by surprise Health concerns about the 2020 coronavirus pandemic are rooted in the catastrophic second wave of the 1918 pandemic, which hit between September and November of that year. By David Tarrant 9:00 AM on Jul 3, 2020 https://www.dallasnews.com/news/2020/07/03/lessons-from-the-past-how-the-deadly-second- wave-of-the-1918-spanish-flu-caught-dallas-and-the-us-by-surprise/ Illustration by staff artist Michael Hogue.(Michael Hogue / Michael Hogue illustration) As August gave way to September of 1918, few people were thinking about the influenza that would soon sweep across Texas and the rest of the country with the speed and deadly ferocity of a firestorm. There had been a relatively mild version of the virus in the spring of that year, mostly affecting troops mobilizing to go off to World War I over in Europe. But by summer the disease known at the time as the Spanish flu had been largely forgotten. The front pages of The Dallas Morning News were dominated by news of American troops pouring into Europe for what would come to be known as World War I. But that would quickly change. By the end of September, a second wave of the flu, far deadlier, would sweep across the country, hitting Dallas and other large cities hard. When health experts worry about the course of the 2020 coronavirus pandemic, they often look back at the second wave of the 1918 pandemic, between September and November, https://www.dallasnews.com/author/david-tarrant 2 when influenza cases overwhelmed hospitals and medical staffs across the country and the dead piled up faster than they could be buried. In Dallas that year, the city’s chief health officer, A.W. Carnes, waved off the fast- approaching pandemic as not much more than the common cold. In a major blunder, he permitted a patriotic parade in late September that attracted a cheering crowd of thousands jammed together downtown. Cases of influenza promptly spiked. The second wave would produce most of the deaths of the pandemic, which experts now estimate at 50 million to 100 million worldwide. In the United States, 675,000 people died from the virus. The Dallas Morning News on Sept. 27, 1918, reported the rapid spread of the Spanish flu. Despite the worsening conditions, Dallas medical officials hesitated to impose restrictions on public gatherings for more than two weeks. As it did then, the world is struggling with a virus for which there is no vaccine. COVID-19, the sickness caused by the new coronavirus, has advanced unabated around the world since it first appeared in China late last year. By the end of June, the number of deaths worldwide exceeded 500,000. Like the Spanish flu in 1918, the new coronavirus isn’t showing signs of fading away anytime soon. Texas ended June with alarm lights flashing as new COVID-19 cases set records daily ...
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1 Table of Contents Title Page Dedication Introduction INTRODUCTION CHAPTER 1 - THE SENSE OF AN EPIDEMIC CHAPTER 2 - PLAGUE: BIRTH OF THE MODEL EPIDEMIC THE COMING OF PLAGUE TO EUROPE DISEASE AND FEARS OF CONSPIRACY PLAGUE AND VIOLENCE TOWARD JEWS ILLNESS AND FAITH PLAGUE AND THE GROWTH OF THE STATE “BLACK DEATH” CHAPTER 3 - CHOLERA, POVERTY, AND THE POLITICIZED EPIDEMIC CHOLERA’S BEGINNINGS A DISEASE OF THE POOR THE POLITICAL TRANSFORMATION OF ILLNESS MIASMA AND THE RISE OF SCIENCE CHOLERA AND UTILITARIANISM CHOLERA IN AMERICA ILLNESS AND IMMIGRATION CHAPTER 4 - GERMS, SCIENCE, AND THE STRANGER GERM THEORY VICTORIOUS THE BIRTH AND GROWTH OF EPIDEMIOLOGY MICROBIOLOGY’S DEBUT EVOLUTION, SOCIAL DARWINISM, AND THE CARRIER GERMS IN AMERICA GERMS, FLU, AND FEAR THE AFTERMATH OF GERM THEORY CHAPTER 5 - THE CONQUEST OF CONTAGION PROGRESSIVISM AND MORALISM GERMS AND THE SEXUAL REVOLUTION “YOU CANNOT HAVE OMELETTES WITHOUT BREAKING EGGS” 2 BEYOND EUGENICS BEYOND GERM THEORY CHAPTER 6 - POSTMODERN EPIDEMICS AN EXTRAORDINARY EPIDEMIC DEBATES ABOUT DEVIANCE THE MIXING OF CAUSE AND EFFECT THE BEHAVIORAL TURN: EDUCATION AS POLICY EDUCATION IN LIEU OF POLICY THE PERSISTENT THEME OF BEHAVIOR THE WORLD’S EPIDEMIC CHAPTER 7 - MANAGING THE IMAGINED EPIDEMIC THE BIOTERRORISM SCARE HEALTH OFFICIALS AS SOOTHSAYERS THE OBESITY SCARE OBESITY AS FALL GUY FOR MODERN FEARS MANAGING MISGIVINGS ABOUT PARENTING: CHILDHOOD OBESITY AUTISM, THE ADMINISTRATIVE EPIDEMIC EPILOGUE Acknowledgements NOTES SELECTED BIBLIOGRAPHY INDEX Copyright Page 3 4 5 To my father 6 INTRODUCTION TO THE PAPERBACK EDITION A half-year after the hardcover publication of Dread, sleeves across America were being rolled up for the swine flu vaccine. New York City set out to inoculate schoolchildren, and pregnant women lined up to get vaccinated at their obstetricians’ offices. Although the swine flu outbreak had caused less harm in the six months since it started than almost any flu event of the past century, everyone was alarmed. And everyone had questions. At a symposium in Holland, people asked me whether I thought their government really needed to buy up enough flu vaccine for every Dutch citizen. A reporter in Chicago told me he saw boycotts of soccer games involving Mexican teams, because people thought the flu could be spread by Mexicans. A Canadian radio host asked whether her country was worrying too much about the flu. An Australian physician and another in France chided me for my refusal to endorse the sky-is-falling rhetoric of flu preparedness. Around the U.S., hand-sanitizer dispensers flowered at supermarket checkouts, airport security points, libraries, and classrooms; colleagues and friends wondered whether the sanitizing gel could really stop the flu virus. At home in New York, nurses cried foul at mandatory immunizations (later rescinded). Physicians expressed frustration at the difficulty of persuading parents to have t ...
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1 Lessons from the past: How the deadly second wave of the 1918 ‘Spanish flu’ caught Dallas and the U.S. by surprise Health concerns about the 2020 coronavirus pandemic are rooted in the catastrophic second wave of the 1918 pandemic, which hit between September and November of that year. By David Tarrant 9:00 AM on Jul 3, 2020 https://www.dallasnews.com/news/2020/07/03/lessons-from-the-past-how-the-deadly-second- wave-of-the-1918-spanish-flu-caught-dallas-and-the-us-by-surprise/ Illustration by staff artist Michael Hogue.(Michael Hogue / Michael Hogue illustration) As August gave way to September of 1918, few people were thinking about the influenza that would soon sweep across Texas and the rest of the country with the speed and deadly ferocity of a firestorm. There had been a relatively mild version of the virus in the spring of that year, mostly affecting troops mobilizing to go off to World War I over in Europe. But by summer the disease known at the time as the Spanish flu had been largely forgotten. The front pages of The Dallas Morning News were dominated by news of American troops pouring into Europe for what would come to be known as World War I. But that would quickly change. By the end of September, a second wave of the flu, far deadlier, would sweep across the country, hitting Dallas and other large cities hard. When health experts worry about the course of the 2020 coronavirus pandemic, they often look back at the second wave of the 1918 pandemic, between September and November, https://www.dallasnews.com/author/david-tarrant 2 when influenza cases overwhelmed hospitals and medical staffs across the country and the dead piled up faster than they could be buried. In Dallas that year, the city’s chief health officer, A.W. Carnes, waved off the fast- approaching pandemic as not much more than the common cold. In a major blunder, he permitted a patriotic parade in late September that attracted a cheering crowd of thousands jammed together downtown. Cases of influenza promptly spiked. The second wave would produce most of the deaths of the pandemic, which experts now estimate at 50 million to 100 million worldwide. In the United States, 675,000 people died from the virus. The Dallas Morning News on Sept. 27, 1918, reported the rapid spread of the Spanish flu. Despite the worsening conditions, Dallas medical officials hesitated to impose restrictions on public gatherings for more than two weeks. As it did then, the world is struggling with a virus for which there is no vaccine. COVID-19, the sickness caused by the new coronavirus, has advanced unabated around the world since it first appeared in China late last year. By the end of June, the number of deaths worldwide exceeded 500,000. Like the Spanish flu in 1918, the new coronavirus isn’t showing signs of fading away anytime soon. Texas ended June with alarm lights flashing as new COVID-19 cases set records daily ...
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World war 1 Sara Mendonca
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New technologies of the war tyler
New technologies of the war
New technologies of the war
History
History
World war i presentation
World war i presentation
World war l
World war l
Changing roles for women at home
Changing roles for women at home
War industries board
War industries board
New technologies of the war power point
New technologies of the war power point
History
History
New technologies of the war and 1918 flu
New technologies of the war and 1918 flu
Technologies of the war
Technologies of the war
Medicine on the war front
Medicine on the war front
History timeline 2.8.11
History timeline 2.8.11
War technology and the flu pandemic
War technology and the flu pandemic
Presentation1
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Great Migration and
1918 Flu Epidemic By Jehad Zakot
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