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  1. Oct 17, 2018 · Getty Images. The Spanish flu emerged as the world was recovering from years of global war. It was to have some surprising and far-reaching effects. The picture we have of the 1918 flu pandemic is ...

  2. November 1918 was the deadliest month of the greatest pandemic in recorded history: the “Spanish Flu.” Recent estimates suggest that this flu claimed as many as 50 million lives around the world between 1918 and 1919, killing more people in a single year than the entire “Black Death” of the 14 th century.

  3. The influenza pandemic of 1918-1919 killed more people than the Great War, known today as World War I (WWI), at somewhere between 20 and 40 million people. It has been cited as the most devastating epidemic in recorded world history. More people died of influenza in a single year than in four-years of the Black Death Bubonic Plague from 1347 to ...

  4. Jan 26, 2018 · The pandemic, combined with mortality during the First World War, caused United States life expectancy to drop by 12 years. Today flu can still be lethal, but a tragedy on the scale of 1918 has ...

  5. The influenza pandemic of 1918-1919 killed more people than the Great War, known today as World War I (WWI), at somewhere between 20 and 40 million people. It has been cited as the most devastating epidemic in recorded world history. More people died of influenza in a single year than in four-years of the Black Death Bubonic Plague from 1347 to ...

  6. The impact of the pandemic on the United States is sobering to contemplate: Some 670,000 Americans died. In 1918, medicine had barely become modern; some scientists still believed “miasma ...

  7. Aug 2, 2022 · Facts about the Spanish flu. In 1918, a strain of influenza known as Spanish flu caused a global pandemic, spreading rapidly and killing indiscriminately. Young, old, sick and otherwise-healthy ...

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