Study challenges notion of ‘pandemic’ flu
Posted on April 13, 2008 Comments (0)
Study challenges notion of ‘pandemic’ flu
Doshi says the pandemic-equals-extreme-mortality concept appears to be a generalization of a single data point: the 1918 season, a period in which “doctors lacked intensive care units, respirators, antiviral agents and antibiotics.” He argues that “had no other aspect of modern medicine but antibiotics been available in 1918, there seems good reason to believe that the severity of this pandemic would have been far reduced.”
As may be expected given improvements in living conditions, nutrition and other public health measures, influenza death rates substantially declined across the 20th century. Doshi calculates an 18-fold decrease in influenza deaths between the 1940s and 1990s, a trend that began far before the introduction of widespread vaccination.
Related: Why the Flu Likes Winter – Reducing the Impact of a Flu Pandemic – Drug-resistant Flu Virus – Avian Flu
Categories: Health Care, Students, Universities
Tags: flu, Health Care, medical study, MIT
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