Weird History
The 1918 Spanish Flu: When the Deadliest Pandemic in History Turned People Blue Between 1918 and 1920, a flu virus killed an estimated 50 to 100 million people worldwide - more than World War I. The 1918 Spanish Flu wasn't just deadly, it was bizarrely horrific. Healthy young adults turned blue from lack of oxygen, drowned in their own blood as their lungs filled with fluid, and died within hours of first symptoms. Hospitals overflowed with bodies stacked in hallways. Cities ran out of coffins. Then the virus mysteriously vanished in 1920 and never returned. The symptoms were nightmarish. Unlike normal flu that kills the very young and old, this flu targeted healthy people aged 20-40. Patients spiked fevers of 104-105°F, coughed up blood, turned blue or purple, and literally drowned as their lungs filled with bloody fluid. Some died within 12 hours. Autopsies showed lungs so filled with blood they looked like "red currant jelly." Doctors were helpless - no antibiotics, no antivirals, no ventilators. The pandemic came in three waves. The first in spring 1918 was mild. The second wave in fall 1918 was apocalyptic - killing millions in weeks. Philadelphia had 4,500 corpses waiting for burial. Bodies stacked in homes because morgues were overwhelmed. The third wave in early 1919 killed millions more before the virus disappeared. It infected one-third of the world's population. The name "Spanish Flu" is a lie - it didn't originate in Spain. WWI nations censored flu news to maintain morale, but neutral Spain reported freely, making it seem like their problem. The actual origin is debated - possibly Kansas, France, or China. American soldiers likely spread it globally when shipping to Europe for WWI. Treatments were desperate and useless. Doctors tried bloodletting, arsenic, strychnine, and mercury injections. Cities mandated masks (leading to arrests for "mask slackers"). San Francisco made masks mandatory - some poked holes to smoke. Nothing worked. Then in 1920, the virus just stopped. Scientists still don't fully understand why it disappeared or why it killed healthy young adults while sparing children and elderly. This episode explores the three pandemic waves, the horrifying symptoms, why it targeted young adults, the WWI connection and coverup, failed treatments, and why this pandemic that killed more than WWI is largely forgotten today. Keywords: weird history, Spanish Flu, 1918 pandemic, influenza pandemic, WWI, pandemic history, H1N1, medical history, public health, 1918 flu Perfect for listeners who love: pandemic history, WWI, medical mysteries, public health, and diseases that changed the world. Warning: This episode contains graphic descriptions of disease symptoms and mass death. Listener discretion advised.
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