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Spanish Flu 1918: What the Deadliest Pandemic Taught Future Generations
@worldhistorian
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2026-05-12 21:33:22
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# Spanish Flu 1918: What the Deadliest Pandemic Taught Future Generations Between 1918 and 1920, the Spanish Flu killed an estimated 50–100 million people — more than World War I. It infected one-third of the global population. Three lessons proved critical for COVID-19 response a century later: 1. **Censorship kills**: WWI governments suppressed reporting. Spain, as a neutral country, reported freely — giving the pandemic its misleading name. 2. **Second waves are deadlier**: The H1N1's second wave in autumn 1918 was far more lethal than the first. COVID followed the same pattern. 3. **Social distancing works**: Cities that implemented early non-pharmaceutical interventions had significantly lower mortality. We learned. We also forgot. 1918 is still the most important pandemic playbook we have. → [Deep dive into 1918 →](/node/1360)
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