The Great Influenza: The Story of the Deadliest Pandemic in History by John M. Barry was originally published in 2004 but re-released several times since then. This remarkable book describes not only the human disaster of the huge pandemic of 1918, but also the history of medicine and research in that era and the experiences of a number of prominent scientists. The edition I read was published before the Covid pandemic, so there are no comparisons, but of course I was constantly making comparisons in my mind as I read, and I was somewhat shocked at how much worse things were in 1918 than in 2020!
Medical sciences — both clinical and laboratory practices — were developing into their modern form at the time of the pandemic. Barry follows the work of several physicians and scientists, mostly in the United States at the Rockefeller Institute and at Johns Hopkins University. He also describes how medical schools and research institutions were then emerging into their modern form, and how medical theory and medical education were developing in the era from the 1890s until the First World War.
Here are five important things that I learned while reading about this painful and horrendous historic event:
- The global death toll was at least 35 million and probably as high as 100 million people out of a world population much smaller than the current world population. (In the covid pandemic the current death toll according to the World Health Organization has been almost 7 million).
- The initial explosion of vast numbers of cases of this highly contagious and gruesomely virulent disease took place in the late summer and autumn of 1918 at US military camps where tens of thousands of young men were being trained and prepared for the battlefields of World War I. The descriptions of the camps full of fatally sick and helpless youth, the stacks of bodies, the lines of cots between the prepared hospital beds, the lack of nurses and doctors, and the suffering of so many people is horrifying (and I can’t possibly begin to evoke the atmosphere that the detailed descriptions in the book create).
- In some parts of the world, populations of entire villages and towns were 100% killed; for example, many Inuit towns in Alaska had no survivors. The death toll in many American cities was huge, but elsewhere it was much worse.
- Researchers were only beginning to identify and define the existence of viruses at the time, and did not prove that the influenza cause was a virus until the pandemic was almost over. The details of the research were fascinating — desperately, the best of the scientists tried to find a cure or a vaccine to stop the epidemic, but they were totally unable to do so. Opportunistic bacteria caused secondary infections in a large number of victims, which amplified the death toll, and which also confounded the efforts to identify the infectious agent of the pandemic.
- It’s well-known that the most devastated age group of the 1918 flu was young people from late adolescence through around age 40; in some parts of the US and Europe this group sustained death rates up to 9% of their cohort. Although common knowledge (as I’ve always heard it) believes that older people had immunity left over from a previous influenza epidemic, the author presents another, more convincing theory. This theory says that the extremely virulent virus caused an overwhelming immune response in many victims, which resulted in a “cytokine storm” when the body essentially overwhelms itself, especially destroying the lungs. (We heard of the same catastrophic result of the coronavirus in 2020.) Younger people have more vigorous immune systems, so were much more likely to succumb to this effect.
The Great Influenza has a very similar set of topics to my recent reading of Foreign Bodies: Pandemics, Vaccines, and the Health of Nations by Simon Schama, which I wrote about a few days ago. I was telling a friend about the Schama book, and he recommended the book by Barry — and in fact, loaned me his copy. This explains why I read the two in quick succession!
Review © 2023 mae sander
The flu epidemic was such a terrible pandemic... in my own family, there are at least several people who died or were orphaned as a result of this pandemic, and their stories have had a strong effect on our family history. So much so, it kind of surprises me to hear that this history is fading from public consciousness.
ReplyDeleteVery interesting to see this book featured so soon after the review for the Simon Schama book -- thanks for this review.
This seems pretty heavy -- but also very interesting.
ReplyDeleteThanks for the informative review. The 1918 pandemic seemed truly deadly and scary. It is interesting to compare it to covid and lessons missed. It seem you are becoming our health history expert after reading such big books on the topic. I liked reading the takeaways from these.
ReplyDeleteIt's good to be reminded that throughout human history there have been pandemics, and during times when both people and potential remedies were unsophisticated and inadequate. At least they didn't have to deal with Pat Robertson (nor do we any more) telling us that every disaster was retribution from his kind and loving god.
ReplyDeleteC'est une publication très intéressante. je ne savais pas qu'aux USA,on a si peu parlé après la première guerre mondiale, de l'épidémie de grippe espagnole.je savais qu'elle avait été dévastatrice mais pas au point de toucher des régions entières et de décimer des villes et des villages.merci pour ce résumé trsè complet
ReplyDeleteBack in the summer of 2019, I attended a lecture at our local library. The lecturer had written several books on the 1918 Pandemic where he espoused the Pandemic started in Kansas. He had lots of statistics, too. When the pandemic that came out of China was announced, I remembered what he had told us. I had no idea of the statistics of the 1918 pandemic until you shared it with us. This might be a really good read, Mae.
ReplyDelete