The Spanish flu killed up to 100 million people a century ago, and while it provides lessons for today, medicine and disease management have advanced a lot since then
at its highest estimates, and a large number of these were killed by the Spanish flu.
According to Stanford University academics, more US soldiers died of the flu in Europe than fell in combat. It is believed that up to a third of the world’s population at the time, or 500 million people, were infected by the flu. Of these between 10 and 20 percent ending up dying of the disease.
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