News

The Spanish flu pandemic is famous for killing more than 50 million people. The other thing it’s famous for is how quickly ...
That’s why I was so excited to see Ari Aster’s new movie, “Eddington,” the first film I know of to really capture what it was ...
The COVID-19 pandemic has now killed roughly the same amount of people who died from the 1918 Spanish flu. 1 weather alerts 1 closings/delays. Watch Now ...
Experts are worried that despite the hard-won lessons of covid, we are not fully prepared for the next pandemic.
COVID-19 has now killed about as many Americans as the 1918-19 Spanish flu pandemic did — approximately 675,000. And like the worldwide scourge of a century ago, the coronavirus may never ...
More people died in two years of the COVID-19 pandemic in the U.S. than in 40 years of the HIV/AIDS epidemic. The toll even dwarfs the estimated 675,000 deaths during the 1918-19 Spanish Flu ...
The COVID-19 pandemic has inspired many comparisons to the 1918 flu, sometimes called the Spanish flu. LIBRARY OF CONGRESS PRINTS AND PHOTOGRAPHS DIVISION Both can be tackled with social distancing.
New York City's spike in deaths amid the COVID-19 pandemic this spring was comparable to the death toll at the peak of the 1918 flu pandemic, a study published in JAMA Network Open found.