Ten years ago I published an article called “No More Crying ‘Spanish Flu,’” in part because with every pandemic or potential pandemic that’s exactly what public health service gurus and the media were doing. And in part because the comparison to the 1918–19 flu was always ludicrous, based not on science but primal fear.More on Fauci from Fumento
Well, it’s happened again. And this time the klaxon-ringer is no less than the nation’s top health official, National Institutes of Allergies and Infectious Diseases Director Dr. Anthony Fauci.Even a virus far more deadly than that of the Spanish flu would not pose a similar threat because of tremendously different conditions then and now.Fauci’s advice and counsel during the coronavirus pandemic has been “uneven,” to say the least. Most recently, he said of New York, the state with the second-highest COVID-19 deaths per capita, that the state did it “correctly.” But he’s never been particularly reliable. In 1983, he made a huge splash with a medical journal article stating that AIDS could be transmissible through casual contact. Fauci repeated the pattern during successive disease panics, such as when he declared 16 years ago that we’re “due” for “massive person-to-person” spread of Avian flu H5N1.
While Fauci didn’t define “massive,” according to one estimate by a CDC modeler “even in the best-case scenarios” it would “cause 2 to 7 million deaths” worldwide. British epidemiologist Neil Ferguson (whose prediction of 500,000 coronavirus deaths in Britain and two million in the U.S. would lead to economically ruinous nationwide lockdowns in both countries) scaled that back to “only” 200,000. As it turned out, the disease killed 440 worldwide.
More recently, Fauci sounded the threat of the Zika virus, demanding billions more in taxpayer funds. It barely touched two U.S. states before burning out on its own.
As to his Spanish flu comparison, on Tuesday he told a Georgetown University webinar, “If you look at the magnitude of the 1918 pandemic where anywhere from 50 to 75 to 100 million people globally died (325 to 430 million adjusted to today’s population), that was the mother of all pandemics and truly historic. I hope we don’t even approach that with this, but it does have the makings of, the possibility of … approaching that in seriousness.”
Granted, he’s still ahead of CDC Director Robert Redfield, who has already indirectly stated that coronavirus is worse than the Spanish flu. But that may not be saying much.
We already know that COVID-19 has a far lower mortality rate than even lesser 20th-century flu pandemics. The CDC’s “best estimate” is around 0.26 percent. That compares to about 0.67 percent for the “Asian flu” of 1957–58, which in turn was vastly milder than Spanish flu.
Further, even a virus far more deadly than that of the Spanish flu would not pose a similar threat because of tremendously different conditions then and now.
In 1918, the world was at war. In part because of that, people were in far poorer general health than we are today, with malnourishment commonplace. We know malnourishment is a powerful factor in infectious disease severity. Apparently only 10 to 15 percent of Irish people who died during the great potato famine of 1845–50 actually starved, with the rest carried off by diseases such as typhus.
Far from “social distancing,” soldiers were packed like veritable sardines in barracks, box cars, ships, and trenches. The first identified outbreak of the disease, curiously associated with Spain, was actually in the crowded environs of Fort Riley, Kansas.
Back then, medicine was not so advanced as it is today: “The arsenal of available medical countermeasures to treat pandemic influenza virus infections in 1918 was quite basic and largely limited to supportive care,” notes one medical journal paper. Common “treatments” included aspirin, fresh air, and sunshine.
We’ve come a long way. Among other things, we’ve developed flu vaccines, pneumonia vaccines, and pulmonary intubation. There were no effective antivirals until fairly recently, and, rather amazingly, even use of IV tubes for hydration, nourishment, and continuous medicine injection wasn’t common in the U.S. until the 1960s.
Unfortunately, development of new medicines remains agonizingly slow compared to, say, incredible advances with electronics. So despite almost countless new drugs being developed against COVID-19, don’t expect any miracles in the near future.
But in the last century we’ve certainly done a lot of pharmaceutical shelf-stocking, and there’s nothing a pharma company loves more than getting new tricks out of old drugs. Thus one such, the steroid dexamethasone, appears to make pulmonary intubation significantly safer and thus more effective for coronavirus patients, while another, the antiviral remdesivir, appears to at least shorten coronavirus hospital stays and may also reduce mortality.
Although there are about 140 COVID-19 vaccine candidates and some now approaching Phase III (usually the final phase) of testing, it shouldn’t be simply assumed we’ll shortly have one that’s both safe and reasonably effective shortly. So it would be questionable to base policies on that assumption. But advances in the studies of virology, immunology, and computing power, especially artificial intelligence, mean we can probably expect such a vaccine in record time.
And this is rather important: There were no antibiotics in 1918–19, and, as one medical journal paper put it, “The majority of deaths in the 1918-1919 influenza pandemic likely resulted directly from secondary bacterial pneumonia caused by common upper respiratory-tract bacteria.” The chief researcher for that paper?
Dr. Anthony Fauci.
Politics turned Parody from within a Conservative Bastion inside the People's Republic of Maryland
Dr. Anthony Fauci throws wild first pitch during MLB's opening game. The most famous person on the field before Thursday opening night game between the New York Yankees and Washington Nationals wasn’t Aaron Judge, Max Scherzer or Gerrit Cole. It was Dr. Anthony Fauci, the infectious disease expert who has been so prominent in America's response to the coronavirus. During his time in the public eye, Fauci has made no secret of his baseball fandom, particularly his fandom of the Washington Nationals. So Fauci was picked by the Nats to throw out the first pitch of the delayed 2020 season...
ReplyDeleteHe makes a much better pitcher than epidemiologist. He should most defintely quit his day job and pitch for the Nats.
ReplyDeleteSo epidemiologists get things wrong. It's the nature of the science. That the Dotard administration would do opposition research on someone who works for them is of greater significance than what Faucci has been wrong about in the past.
ReplyDeleteDotard certainly isn't an epidemiologist. Yet he continues to make predictions that are incredibly and stupidly wrong. And thinks that if Faucci is "discredited" that somehow lends credence to his bullshit. Well, guess again. Faucci was invited to throw out the first pitch because he's known and people trust him. WAY more than Dotard, by the way.
Not when accuracy counts. lol!
ReplyDeleteFake news. You can tell in the video that he's younger (it is 2004). Dotard has never thrown out the first pitch as predisent.
ReplyDeleteWho cares? He was a pitcher in high school, not a nerd like Fauci.
ReplyDeleteDotard is afraid of embarrassing himself. People very well may have booed. Maybe he'll do it now with no audience. LOL. I don't know if Faucci was or was not a "nerd". Nor do I give a crap.
ReplyDeletelol! You can tell by the way he throws a ball.
ReplyDeleteNo muscle memory.
ReplyDeleteMy idea is to present an image to children that it is good to be intellectual, and not to care about the peer pressures to be anti-intellectual. I want every child to turn into a nerd – where that means someone who prefers studying and learning to competing for social dominance, which can unfortunately cause the downward spiral into social rejection — Gerald Sussman, quoted by Katie Hafner, The New York Times, 29 August 1993.
ReplyDeleteDotard = not a "stable genius". Not a nerd.
Gerald Sussman, exactly what a nerdy beta-minus would say.
ReplyDeleteYou're the one who chose to call himself "Minus". And your insults mean nothing to me because I categorically reject your "alpha male" worldview. Toxic masculinity is the cause of a lot of society's problems. Being a "nerd" is a good thing. Men who view themselves as "alpha males" are male chauvinist assholes. No doubt you consider yourself an "alpha male". It explains your hatred for the #meetoo movement. Women (like minorities) should know their place (which is subservient to White men. Especially White alpha males).
ReplyDelete...what I love most is having a beta like you pick out all of my nits... :)
ReplyDeleteIf you told me to pick your nits I'd tell you to go f*ck yourself. Also, there is shampoo for that. You should get some. Or you could shave your head.
ReplyDeleteIsn't that why you come here? To pick nits? lol!
ReplyDeleteSo, what your're saying is that Dotard lies (which you parrot) are like a parasitical infestation? I agree. But reading your blog won't help get rid of the infestation. I only find it interesting how the mind of an insane person works. You want me to leave?
ReplyDeleteDidn't Nietzsche once say (GoM), "The creditor has always grown more humane proportionately as he has grown more rich; finally the amount of injury he can endure without really suffering becomes the criterion of his wealth. It is possible to conceive of a society blessed with so great a consciousness of its own power as to indulge in the most aristocratic luxury of letting its wrong-doers go scot-free.—”What do my parasites matter to me?” might society say. “Let them live and flourish! I am strong enough for it.”—The justice which began with the maxim, “Everything can be paid off, everything must be paid off,” ends with connivance at the escape of those who cannot pay to escape—it ends, like every good thing on earth, by destroying itself.— The self-destruction of Justice! we know the pretty name it calls itself—Grace! it remains, as is obvious, the privilege of the strongest, better still, their super-law.
ReplyDeleteSo do as you please. unlike pShaw, I'm strong enough for "tolerance"
A tolerant racist? LOL.
ReplyDeleteA tolerant American. :)
ReplyDeleteAmerican racist. btw, if Obama wasn't an American (because he lived outside the United States as a boy), doesn't that mean you aren't an American? Didn't you say you grew up outside the United States?
ReplyDeleteAmerican non-panchreston who escaped the Kafka trap, you mean.
ReplyDeleteps Obama was born in Kenya. I was born on Westover AFB, federal property in Massachusetts, USA.
No. Nobody accusing Dotard of racism is using a "kafka trap". They accuse based on his words and actions. Such as appointing the White Supremacist Stephen Miller to devise his racist immigration policies.
ReplyDeleteAnd Obama was born in Hawaii. Hawaii is a part of the United States. Dotard has previously claimed he had investigators in Hawaii looking into Obama's birth certificate. As per Dotard they were digging up stuff that he would disclose shortly. Later he admitted Obama was born in the United States. Why would he do that if Obama were actually born in Kenya? Why not put out what his investigators found? Is he in on the cover up?
Stephen Miller the Jew King of White Supremacy? LOL!
ReplyDelete