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Could SARS Set off Another Great Pandemic?
By Ross Collins History News Service
Again a disease explodes out of nowhere -- a new flu that
spreads easily, sickens people quickly and kills them
sometimes. It also pays its call on a world that has no
antidote.
We once assumed that infectious diseases such as
influenza could be controlled. The availability of modern
antibiotics persuaded many of us that any real threat from a
flu microbe was as quaint as wind-up phonographs and rumble
seats. In the 1960s the surgeon general's office declared
that old-time infectious diseases had been conquered. Now
humanity's microscopic enemies have appeared once more to
challenge human hubris. Severe acute respiratory syndrome,
SARS, has advanced out of southern China to menace Hong
Kong, Toronto and, probably, the rest of the world.
Still, we live in modern times. Public health departments
are well acquainted with microbial threats to public health.
We have seen nearly a century of medical progress since the
last great flu epidemic. That was in 1918. It was a
different influenza in a different world. But two things
about that epidemic 85 years ago seem similar to today's new
threat to public health: the specter of a pandemic, and the
complacent American response.
The so-called "Spanish" flu epidemic of 1918, like SARS,
probably originated in China. From World War I troops it
spread throughout the world. When it appeared in the spring
of 1918, U. S. public health authorities were not unduly
concerned. This flu, after all, seemed fairly benign. People
would usually recover, as they do today, unless they were at
the extremes of life -- very young or very old. SARS, as
some observers have noted, is also somewhat benign. People
usually recover, as they do from more familiar strains of
flu.
As the Spanish flu spread along the East Coast in the
summer of 1918, city leaders responded mildly. In
Philadelphia people were told they had nothing to fear. It
was only the flu and by August it seemed to be subsiding.
But the greatest menace then, as always, was mutation.
As science fiction buffs know, in the popular Star Trek
series space heroes battle the galaxy's most fearsome foe:
the Borg. That half-human civilization has the capability of
learning from its enemies' resistance and changing, or
mutating, to a more lethal force. In fall 1918, the Spanish
flu became the Borg.
In fact, the microbe mutated to cause the deadliest
pandemic in human history. Before it subsided in 1919, it
had killed 20 million people around the world, more than the
number who died in World War I battles. In the United States
it killed 550,000.
Philadelphia became famous because it suffered more than
any other U.S. city: 13,374 flu deaths. What was really
shocking were the persons who contracted this deadly strain:
young healthy adults aged 20 to 29. And its speed! A person
would feel perfectly fine one day, have a little cough the
next. Two days later the victim would be dead.
Then, as now, people hoped that advances in medical
research could cope with this lethal mutation. After all, by
the twentieth century doctors had made good progress against
history's greatest killers: smallpox, typhoid, tetanus,
malaria. Then, as now, people expected a cure would soon be
found. Health researchers worked desperately to isolate the
virus, and formulate a vaccine. In 1918 they failed. Their
suggested treatment: wait and hope.
Health care researchers today may rely on a vast store of
knowledge unknown to doctors then. But they haven't come up
with an antidote to SARS. A vaccine may yet be formulated,
but will it be formulated in time? In the fall of 1918, more
than 21,000 Americans were dying each week. The virus that
caused the Spanish flu was eventually isolated -- in 1933,
the pandemic long gone.
In 1918, doctors could only recommend what they recommend
today -- that we wear masks and avoid gatherings where the
microbe can be easily spread. In some cities in 1918, anyone
leaving the house had to wear a mask, either a cotton one
(which proved to be useless) or a full-sized gas mask (which
proved to be ridiculous).
Any kind of public assembly was banned. Movies were
canceled. Schools were closed. Public health officers in the
East who had underestimated the flu's speed warned their
counterparts in the West to control the spread not by
vaccine but by preparation: "Hunt up your wood-workers and
cabinet-makers and set them to making coffins," one warned
in the 1918 American Journal of Health. "Then take your
street laborers and set them to digging graves. If you do
this you will not have your dead accumulate faster than you
can dispose of them."
Much has changed today. Yet as Dr. Alfred Sommer, dean of
the Johns Hopkins Bloomberg School of Public Health, has
warned, "The microbial world will always remain a
significant health threat, given its capacity to continue to
mutate new, dangerous strains infecting man."
Indeed, the Spanish Flu epidemic might serve to warn us
of this truth. Oddly, however, most people nowadays have
barely heard of it. Why should we have forgotten the modern
equivalent of the medieval Black Death? Perhaps because it
killed mostly the young: no famous general, no celebrity
entertainer, powerful politician. Perhaps AIDS blew us out
of the kind of complacency common to earlier generations.
But the flu is not AIDS. What the 1918 pandemic reminds us
is that the flu could kill even more efficiently. Let's hope
complacency doesn't give SARS the chance to become another
"great one."
Ross Collins is an associate professor in the Department
of Communication, North Dakota State University, and a
writer for the History News Service.
[Ross Collins, Department of Communication, North Dakota
State University, Box 5075, Fargo, ND 58105. Telephone:
(701) 231-7295; fax: (701) 231-7784; e-mail: Ross.Collins@ndsu.nodak.edu;
http://www.ndsu.edu/communication/collins]
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This article was posted on July 11, 2003.
Pictured at top (left to right): King George III
of England, Harriet Beecher Stowe, "Surrender at
Appomattox", Albert Schweitzer, The sinking of the U.S.S.
Arizona at Pearl Harbor, Bill Clinton.
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