Coronavirus: What India can learn from the deadly 1918 flu
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Coronavirus: What India can learn from the deadly
1918 flu
1918 flu pandemic is believed to
have infected a third of the population worldwide
All interest in living has ceased, Mahatma Gandhi, battling a
vile flu in 1918, told a confidante at a retreat in the western Indian state of
Gujarat.
The
highly infectious Spanish flu had swept
through the ashram in Gujarat where 48-year-old Gandhi was living, four years
after he had returned from South Africa. He rested, stuck to a liquid diet
during "this protracted and first long illness" of his life. When
news of his illness spread, a local newspaper wrote: "Gandhi's life does
not belong to him - it belongs to India".
Outside, the deadly
flu, which slunk in through a ship of returning soldiers that docked in Bombay
(now Mumbai) in June 1918, ravaged India. The disease, according to health
inspector JS Turner, came "like a thief in the night, its onset rapid and
insidious". A second wave of the epidemic began in September in southern
India and spread along the coastline.
The
influenza killed between 17 and 18 million Indians, more than all the
casualties in World War One. India bore a considerable burden of death - it
lost 6% of its people. More women - relatively undernourished, cooped up in
unhygienic and ill-ventilated dwellings, and nursing the sick - died than men.
The pandemic is believed to have infected a third of the world's population and
claimed between 50 and 100 million lives.
Gandhi and his
febrile associates at the ashram were lucky to recover. In the parched
countryside of northern India, the famous Hindi language writer and poet,
Suryakant Tripathi, better known as Nirala, lost his wife and several members
of his family to the flu. My family, he wrote, "disappeared in the blink
of an eye". He found the Ganges river "swollen with dead
bodies". Bodies piled up, and there wasn't enough firewood to cremate
them. To make matters worse, a failed monsoon led to a drought and famine-like
conditions, leaving people underfed and weak, and pushed them into the cities,
stoking the rapid spread of the disease.
To be sure, the
medical realities are vastly different now. Although there's still no cure,
scientists have mapped the genetic material of the coronavirus, and there's the
promise of anti-viral drugs, and a vaccine. The 1918 flu happened in the
pre-antibiotic era, and there was simply not enough medical equipment to
provide to the critically ill. Also western medicines weren't widely accepted
in India then and most people relied on indigenous medication.
Yet, there appear
to be some striking similarities between the two pandemics, separated by a
century. And possibly there are some relevant lessons to learn from the flu,
and the bungled response to it.
The outbreak in
Bombay, an overcrowded city, was the source of the infection's spread back then
- this is something that virologists are fearing now. With more than 20 million
people, Bombay is India's most populous city and Maharashtra, the state where
it's located, has reported the highest number of coronivirus cases in the
country.
By early July in
1918, 230 people were dying of the disease every day, up nearly three times
from the end of June. "The chief symptoms are high temperature and pains
in the back and the complaint lasts three days," The Times of India
reported, adding that "nearly every house in Bombay has some of its
inmates down with fever". Workers stayed away from offices and factories.
More Indian adults and children were infected than resident Europeans. The
newspapers advised people to not spend time outside and stay at home. "The
main remedy," wrote The Times of India, "is to go to bed and not
worry". People were reminded the disease spread "mainly through human
contact by means of infected secretions from the nose and mouths".
"To avoid an
attack one should keep away from all places where there is overcrowding and
consequent risk of infection such as fairs, festivals, theatres, schools,
public lecture halls, cinemas, entertainment parties, crowded railway carriages
etc," wrote the paper. People were advised to sleep in the open rather
than in badly ventilated rooms, have nourishing food and get exercise.
"Above
all," The Times of India added, "do not worry too much about the
disease".
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