Chinese Coronavirus Has Killed More Americans than 1918 Spanish Flu
The Chinese coronavirus has officially killed more Americans than the 1918 Spanish flu pandemic, Axios reported on Monday.
The Chinese coronavirus has officially killed more Americans than the 1918 Spanish flu pandemic, Axios reported on Monday.
Trump added, “Nobody should be forced” to get the vaccine, noting Americans “have our freedoms.”
The World Health Organization (W.H.O.) cautioned Friday the coronavirus pandemic still has two years to run as it issued a directive for masks to be worn by those aged 12 and over.
The oldest living American will celebrate her 116th birthday on Saturday in Charlotte, North Carolina, with a festive parade.
Dr. Anthony Fauci, director of the National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases, testified Tuesday that an emerging virus found in pigs in China shares traits with the 2009 Swine Flu and 1918 Pandemic Flu, and U.S. public health officials are monitoring the disease.
For what are obviously partisan reasons, the media are desperate to stay focused on the coronavirus death count, even though there is not much that can be done about those deaths.
Public fear, not government orders, drove economic shutdowns during the 1918 flu pandemic, said John Barry, author of “The Great Influenza.”
Chinese state media once again floated the prospect of international lawsuits against the United States for supposedly being responsible for the HIV/AIDS epidemic in a column Thursday, adding the 2008 financial crisis and the 1918 Spanish Flu pandemic to the list.
A 102-year-old woman in Westchester County, New York, is inspiring others after winning her recent battle with the coronavirus.
If the Chinese virus is enormously dangerous to people with certain medical conditions and those over 70 years old, but a much smaller danger to those under 70, then shutting down the entire country indefinitely is probably a bad idea.