London flu

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

During the 1972–1973 flu season in the Northern Hemisphere, a new variant of influenza, dubbed the 'London flu' by the press in the United States, was responsible for epidemics in many countries. 'London flu' was caused by a variant of influenza A/H3N2 that was first isolated in India in mid-1971 but only identified as a distinct strain in England in January, 1972.[1]

Until May 1972, all known outbreaks of the London flu were limited to the Northern Hemisphere. In May, Australia, Malaysia, and Singapore reported their first outbreaks, indicating that the flu was spreading during the winter flu season in the Southern Hemisphere. In the United States outbreak, the London flu was reported in 49 of the 50 U.S. states, but it became widespread in only 21 of them. The first known American cases mostly affected American military personnel, with the outbreak beginning at the United States Air Force Academy in Colorado Springs, Colorado. The next known cases of the outbreak involved military installations in Arizona and Colorado. During the last week of November, the first major civilian outbreak developed in Baltimore. In early December, there were outbreaks in Memphis, Tennessee; Kansas City, Kansas, Anchorage; and Seattle, followed by significant outbreaks in New York City and the San Francisco Bay Area in late December.

In January 1973, the flu activity peaked in the Mid-Atlantic region and the Pacific Coast of the United States. The hardest-hit U.S. state was California, with mortality approaching the epidemic threshold in the 11 largest cities of Northern California. The epidemic reportedly aggravated an ongoing shortage of blood. In February 1973, the outbreak peaked in the Southeastern United States and the Midwestern United States. On 2 February, the CDC reported that the country had surpassed 1,000 deaths from influenza and pneumonia; by 9 February, the figure had risen to over 4,300 deaths since the beginning of the year. California alone reported at least 1,083 deaths in its major cities. The epidemic had begun to wane by the first week of March.

Background

Analysis

References

Related Articles

Wikiwand AI