(Photo courtesy of Rita Chotiner) (c) Susann Gilbert 2011

Keeping fans of Alice Calhoun updated on the progress of the upcoming biography

Alice In Hollywoodland: The Life and Times of Silent Screen Actress Alice Calhoun by Susann Gilbert

Friday, March 5, 2010

Tales of the Flu

It’s late winter, two weeks until spring, and prime time for the flu. I almost squeaked through the season but caught a bug just recently myself. While there has been a lot of worry about swine (or H1N1) flu, in addition to the “seasonal” flu, the one I seem to have contracted is known as a norovirus and/or other “unknown enteric” version. My eldest daughter was suffering with this at the same time I was, although I doubt we contaminated each other because we live four hours apart these days. However, an interesting factor about both of our illnesses was that when we compared symptoms, we also realized that each of us had a pet who was ailing from cold-like symptoms; in my case, my cat; in hers, her dog. We joked about having “feline flu” vs. “canine flu”, but it was easy to laugh about it today because we have both recovered.

It is a fact, however, that the flu can be very serious. I was hospitalized about 20 years ago when I became so ill I was dehydrated and needed serious medical attention. And even if a case of the flu doesn’t require a trip to the emergency room or an appointment with your family physician, we all know that it certainly does require rest, lots of water, and time - enough time that work and daily life are interrupted for a few days to a week in order to recover.

The Center for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) reports that in addition to those suffering from seasonal flu, there were also 64,355 cases of H1N1 nationally over this past flu season (which begins Week 40 each year). On average, 36,000 Americans die annually from the seasonal flu. This past year, there were an additional 3,900 who died from the H1N1 virus, and 450 of those were children. This is very serious, and scary. The H1N1 virus has claimed enough lives recently to get our attention, and thank goodness a preventive vaccine exists for those most at risk, for both types of flu. What mainly differentiates H1N1 from seasonal flu is that those most at risk from serious complications are the youngest generation, as opposed to the weak, infirm and elderly who are the normal victims of seasonal flu. But this is not the first time in recent history that an influenza virus has attacked the healthiest and most hearty among us.

The worst flu epidemic the nation has ever known occurred in 1917. The Spanish Flu was first reported in March at a Kansas army hospital. It seemed innocuous at first, with complaints of sore throats, chills, fever and general malaise. But within one week, over 500 men in the same camp had been quarantined. The virus then took off like wildfire, spreading throughout other army barracks and onto naval ships. The degree of severity of the virus became much more serious as young men began suddenly dying by the hundreds. The civilian population became alarmed that it would spread off of military bases and into the general public. Their fears were legitimate. Reports of influenza cases came from Philadelphia, Boston and Washington, D.C. In one single day, 851 persons died in New York City alone. As the strength of the virus spread, victims were succumbing within hours of first exhibiting symptoms. Even more alarming, while the morbidity of flu usually affects children and the elderly, this illness took its toll mainly on young adults, aged 20 to 40. Rumors spread that the Germans had unleashed germs in crowded public places, as a biological warfare tactic of World War I. The crime rate in Chicago dropped significantly – even the hoodlums were too ill to work. Those on the West Coast began to fear for their lives. That fear came true, when San Franciscans began to succumb. Even when the end of World War I came on November 11th, many of those who had danced for joy in the city streets wore face masks for fear of contracting germs. But the preventions did not inhibit the spread of illness as the massive gatherings during parades and celebrations brought on still another wave of the flu.

The statistics were staggering. Millions continued to become infected over the winter, and thousands died. Everyone knew someone who had lost their life to the illness. Overall, more people had perished, worldwide, of the Spanish Flu in one year, than in the four years that the Bubonic Plague had raged through Europe centuries before. More people died world wide than had been killed in the world war. By the time it had run its course, 275,000 Americans had succumbed, or 28% of the entire population of the country. Never before and not since has the world suffered a comparable medical disaster on such a massive scale.