CDC summary: In February 1957, a new influenza A
(H2N2) virus emerged in East Asia, triggering a pandemic (“Asian Flu”). This
H2N2 virus was comprised of three different genes from an H2N2 virus that
originated from an avian influenza A virus, including the H2 hemagglutinin and
the N2 neuraminidase genes. It was first reported in Singapore in February
1957, Hong Kong in April 1957, and in coastal cities in the United States in
summer 1957. The estimated number of deaths was 1.1 million worldwide and
116,000 in the United States.
Like
the current pandemic, there was a demographic pattern to the deaths. It hit the
elderly population with heart and lung disease. In a frightening twist, the
virus could also be fatal for pregnant women. The infection rate was probably
even higher than the Spanish flu of 1918 (675,000 Americans died from this),
but this lowered the overall case fatality rate to 0.67%. A vaccine became available
in late 1957 but was not widely distributed.
The population of the U.S. at
the time was 172 million, which is a little more than half of the current
population. Life
expectancy was 69 as versus 78 today. Even with shorter lives, it was a
healthier population with lower rates of obesity. To extrapolate the data to a
counterfactual, we can conclude that this virus was more wicked than COVID-19
thus far.
What’s remarkable when we look
back at this year, nothing was shut down. Restaurants,
schools, theaters, sporting events, travel – everything continued without
interruption. Without a 24-hour news cycle with thousands of news agencies and
a billion websites hungry for traffic, mostly people paid no attention other
than to keep basic hygiene. It was covered in the press as a medical problem.
The notion that there was a political solution never occurred to anyone.
Zero
Hedge, linked at maggiesfarm.
When
24-hour news people start screaming and demanding action, politicians decide
they have to do something. Like the Wizard, politicians have donned the mantel
of All-Seeingness and I Am Never Wrong.
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