Pandemic Flu or H5N1 influenza
News and web info about the risk of pandemic flu outbreaks such as avian flu or h5n1 influenza.
Memoirs of a 1918 Spanish Flu Survivor

Memoirs of a Spanish Flu Survivor
CNN posted a story today titled “1918 Flu Survivors Share Memories as Research Continues”, and in it, several survivors of the 1918 pandemic were interviewed. These folks are medical curiosities not only for their age, but also for the fact that even after all this time, they still have some immunity to the Spanish flu in the form of B cells, which CNN states are immune cells that produce antibodies.
Paulano’s great uncle Oscar “O. D.” Hansen (born Aug 2, 1893, died June 19, 1987) was also a survivor of the 1918 flu pandemic. During that time, he was in the Army, stationed at Fort Dodge, Iowa. In his 1980 memoirs, he described his experiences:

Pill Box for H1N1 researchers, physicians, immunologists
“There was a tragic thing that happened at Camp Dodge in the fall of 1918. Well, throughout the country for that matter, in the terrible death rate from the flu. There was very little evidence of the sickness in the camp prior to one certain day. However, one day when the flu hit the camp it did so just like a wave or a storm. The day that they announced the flu had hit the camp there was 35 or 40 people who were already sick when I [took the] sick call [data]. I became ill myself and had quite a siege while I was in the barracks, however, I did not go to the hospital because my fever never got over 101 degrees, and they only took those with high fever to the hospital because they were so crowded. I had a friend from Lennox, (South Dakota) who happened to be in my company at the time, his name was Elmer Gedstad, and he spent several nights helping me with cold cloths on my head and neck. Finally, I had some bleeding in my nose and mouth, and that seemed to relieve the situation and I started recovering again. The main part of the siege was over. I did get to town and had an examination by a civilian doctor who assured me that I had double pneumonia. The death rate for several weeks, or at least two or three weeks, in Camp Dodge was said to be about 85 people per day, and curiously it seemed to be the big, strong, heavy people in camp where were most likely to succumb to this malady.”

World Wide concern over the H1N1, the Swine Flu
Somehow, O.D’s retelling of his experience makes the current situation seem little more real to me than all the media hype. Let’s all hope that this history is not repeated.
Technorati Tags: 1918, pandemic, H1N1, Swine Flu, CNN, pill box, World Design, night light, writers design, quill and pen, quill and scroll, memoirs, Fort Dodge, Iowa, researchers, immunologists, physicians, business card holder, Spanish Flu, Camp Dodge, Lennox, South Dakota, Oscar Hansen, O.D. Hansen, Elmer Gedsted, flu survivors, WWI, veteran
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