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Lt Col John (Jack) Christensen
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Lots of parallels on responses then with what we see today on Coronavirus.
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MAJ Ken Landgren
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Edited 4 y ago
Given the metrics the mortality rate was 4% to 10% which is quite high. I am reading coronavirus has a mortality rate of 2% to 3.5%. I consider pandemics akin to fighting the Vietnam War. We can't kill all the enemy if we can't find them, and the enemy will often conduct asymmetric attacks. We also look at enemy thinking they are neutral because it takes time for coronavirus to rear its ugly head.
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1SG Civil Affairs Specialist
1SG (Join to see)
4 y
The Spanish Flu was H1N1, the same one that popped up in 2009.
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MAJ Ken Landgren
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MSgt Steve Sweeney
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Edited 4 y ago
A lot of people like to reference the 1918 Spanish Flu when talking about lethal pandemics, usually to justify or rationalize some over the top reactions. I was involved in some H1N1 planning before I retired and it was common practice to extrapolate the numbers directly using the 1918 H1N1 virus as a baseline without consideration of many of the things mentioned in the post above - a bad practice. In context, the "W" shaped lethality curve of the 1918 virus really is no mystery, but when trying to sensationalize people don't want to consider context or nuance.

Good write up. Thanks.
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