| Literature DB >> 17326953 |
Howard Markel1, Alexandra M Stern, J Alexander Navarro, Joseph R Michalsen, Arnold S Monto, Cleto DiGiovanni.
Abstract
We studied nonpharmaceutical interventions used to mitigate the second, and most deadly, wave of the 1918-1920 influenza pandemic in the United States. We conclude that several small communities implemented potentially successful attempts at preventing the introduction of influenza.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2006 PMID: 17326953 PMCID: PMC3291356 DOI: 10.3201/eid1212.060506
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Emerg Infect Dis ISSN: 1080-6040 Impact factor: 6.883
Six communities that along with Bryn Mawr College escaped influenza pandemic, 1918–1920
| Characteristics | Yerba Buena, CA | Gunnison, CO | Princeton University, NJ | WPIB, PA* | Trudeau Sanatorium, NY | Fletcher, VT | Bryn Mawr College, PA |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Population | ≈6,000 | 1,329 in town, 5,590 in county | 1,142 | 179 students; faculty and staff also lived on-site | 356 patients admitted in 1918; 259 discharged; average daily patient census of 150 | 737 | 465 |
| Geographic isolation | Small island off coast of San Francisco | Small mountain community in western Colorado; commercial, educational, and transportation hub | Student body in a small college town; campus somewhat separated from the town | Located in a busy residential Pittsburgh neighborhood but somewhat isolated by standards of the day | A small institute on the outskirts of a very small mountain community in upstate New York | Very small rural community in upstate Vermont | Student body in a small college town; only 10 miles from Philadelphia |
| Ordinary or special population | Primarily a military population; ≈1,000 civilian family members and workers were present | Ordinary population composed of native-born and immigrant residents | All-male student body; 92% of students were members of a military training corps | Student body was blind and thus isolated by standards of the day | Patients and staff were tubercular and were thus isolated by standards of the day | Ordinary rural population | All-female student body |
| Period of protective sequestration | Sep 23 – Nov 21,1918 | Oct 31, 1918 – Jan 20, 1919 (countywide); public closures and imposed social distancing as of Oct 8, 1918 | Never under a full protective sequestration, as recruits and cadets continually arrived and left; restrictions on off-campus travel (with perimeter control) imposed Oct 8–Dec 21, 1918 | Early Oct – late Nov 1918 | A de facto protective sequestration existed due to its geographic and institutional isolation | Not applicable | ≈Oct 1–Nov 7, 1918 |
| Cases and deaths | 0 cases, 0 deaths during protective sequestration | 0 cases, 0 deaths in town (2 cases, 1 death in county) | 68 cases, 0 deaths in student population† | 12 cases, 0 deaths | 0 cases, 0 deaths | 2 cases, 0 deaths | 110 cases, 0 deaths |
*WPIB, Western Pennsylvania Institution for the Blind. †One professor died.
Figure 1Western State College, Gunnison, Colorado. Source: Denver Public Library, Western History Collection, call no. X-9302.
Figure 2Naval Training Station, San Francisco, California. View looking south over the wharf area, from the eastern end of Yerba Buena ("Goat") Island, 1921. Long Wharf is in the foreground, lined with rowing boats on davits. Beyond is Navy Wharf, with the receiving ship Boston (1887–1946) at far left. The Lighthouse Wharf is beyond that. Collection of Eugene R. O'Brien. Photo #NH 100361. US Naval Historical Center photograph. From US Naval Historical Center (available from http://www.history.navy.mil/photos/images/i00000/i00361.jpg).