The Mother (of all Pandemics) and Her Naughty Children: 100 Years of Behaving Badly

Writing in his diary on September 27, 1918, Charles Corning, former mayor of Concord, New Hampshire, described how flu was blazing through his corner of the world “ as fire shrivels the fields, laying out communities and taking a toll of death unprecedented. ” The next day, he observed, “ A heavy sense of anxiety and apprehension like a dismal cloud in midsummer weighs heavily upon us because of the deadly ravages of the so-called Spanish influenza. Funerals jostle one another so the sable procession goes on. ” That sable procession would eventually claim 167 lives in Concord and at least 50 million more around the globe — a toll of death unmatched by any other recorded disease outbreak before or since. This extraordinary pandemic and what scientists still can learn from it is the topic of the 2018 John Ring LaMontagne Memorial Lecture titled, “ The Mother of all Pandemics and Her Naughty Children: 100 Years of Behaving Badly, ” by Dr. David M. Morens, Senior Advisor to the Director, NIAID. The lecture is scheduled for Tuesday, April 10 at 3 p.m. in Lipsett Amphitheater, Bldg. 10. In 2005, using preserved tissue from several 1918 flu victims, researchers determined the gene sequence of the strain of influenza A virus that sparked the pandemic and concluded that it was of avian origin. But exactly how, when and where it made the jump to humans remains unclear. The 1918 virus was deadlier than other known flu viruses and it killed a substantial proportion of p...
Source: Videocast - All Events - Category: General Medicine Tags: Upcoming Events Source Type: video