donaldbuzz&minnie
Happy to be here!
- Joined
- Feb 13, 2004
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Seasonal flu tends to kill approximately 0.1% of the people who get it. The 1918-1919 pandemic flu killed approximately 2.5% of the people who caught it, so it was much more deadly than regular flu, and absolutely nothing to be taken lightly. The bird flu currently circulating has been killing close to 50% of the people it infects, last time I looked.
I didn't mean to imply that if this swine flu becomes widespread, and if, worst case, it claims as many proportional victims as the "Spanish" flu did, that it should be taken lightly. Far from it. I would definitely leave my house only when absolutely necessary until they came up with a vaccine in 4 - 5 months. But society in 1918 continued to function, and would again now.
I'm not going to really worry unless this swine flu mutates into a killer close to the current bird flu, which up until now has not very sucessfully passed from person to person. But swine flu could combine with bird flu, and no one knows how virulent that kind of mix would be. A flu that kills 30%+ of its victims would shut society down, and that's what would really concern me. No one would want to go to work, so food production and distribution, health care, utilities - everything would suffer. But, we're not looking at that at all right now.
I didn't mean to imply that if this swine flu becomes widespread, and if, worst case, it claims as many proportional victims as the "Spanish" flu did, that it should be taken lightly. Far from it. I would definitely leave my house only when absolutely necessary until they came up with a vaccine in 4 - 5 months. But society in 1918 continued to function, and would again now.
I'm not going to really worry unless this swine flu mutates into a killer close to the current bird flu, which up until now has not very sucessfully passed from person to person. But swine flu could combine with bird flu, and no one knows how virulent that kind of mix would be. A flu that kills 30%+ of its victims would shut society down, and that's what would really concern me. No one would want to go to work, so food production and distribution, health care, utilities - everything would suffer. But, we're not looking at that at all right now.