Medical Xpress January 28, 2025
Estanislao Nistal Villán, Javier Arranz Herrero and Jesús Presa Mansilla, The Conversation

The 1918 Spanish flu pandemic was caused by a particularly virulent strain of influenza virus. It infected 500 million people, caused around 50 million deaths, and its impact was so severe that global life expectancy fell dramatically. It claimed more lives than the First World War.

In their efforts to develop a vaccine, researchers at the time worked under the mistaken assumption that influenza was caused by bacteria, based on Richard Pfeiffer‘s 1892 discovery of the “bacillus influenzae,” which today is known as the bacterium Haemophilus influenzae.

It was not until 1931 that Richard Shope discovered the Influenza A virus in pigs. In 1933, Wilson Smith, Christopher Andrewes and Patrick Laidlaw then discovered the same virus in humans.

Subsequent work...

Today's Sponsors

LEK
ZeOmega

Today's Sponsor

LEK

 
Topics: Govt Agencies, Healthcare System, Patient / Consumer, Provider, Public Health / COVID
How the Healthcare Sector Can Support Los Angeles Amid the Wildfires
Confirming RFK Jr. Could Mean Swift And Unchecked Upheaval For Vaccines
Healthcare’s outlook in 2025: New administration spells uncertainty, but hope remains
The Lingering Legacy Of Thimerosal
CDC abruptly halts WHO cooperation

Share This Article