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Original scientific paper

https://doi.org/10.31952/amha.17.2.4

SPANISH FLU IN THE NERETVA VALLEY

Ivo Mišur orcid id orcid.org/0000-0002-6044-8208 ; Zavod za ispitivanje kvalitete


Full text: croatian pdf 164 Kb

page 251-268

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Abstract

The Spanish flu is a pandemic that was neglected even though it killed more people than World War I. At the end of 1918, newspaper reports are scarce due to war events, press censorships, and burst political events. For decades after the epidemic was over, the Spanish flu was not the subject of scientific research. By analysing the entry from the registers of the six Neretva parishes (Borovci-Nova Selo, Desne-Bagalovići, Dobranje, Opuzen, Metkovic, Vidonje, and Vid), statistical data on the scale of the epidemic were reconstructed as well as the time course of the spread of the disease in the valley. The sex and age structure of the deceased were also analysed. The disease was spreading from Opuzen throughout the valley. The peak of the epidemic was in the second half of November and late December. The villages of the Desne and Vidonje were the most affected. Vid was also captured by the third wave in 1920, which was as deadly as that in 1918. The most affected were women, which fits in Croatian statistics. Comparing the timeline of epidemics in Zagreb and Neretva valley, it is visible that Zagreb was affected earlier by an epidemic. The third wave did not affect Zagreb as much as it did Neretva, especially the village of Vidonje. In these Neretva parishes, people under twenty were mostly affected. This deviates from the general rules and statistics of the Spanish flu, which stated that the most affected population was between the ages of twenty and forty. The article deals with data on the Spanish Neretva flu cases, while the number of infections remains unknown.

Keywords

History of medicine; 20th century; pandemic; Spanish flu; Neretva Valley

Hrčak ID:

232038

URI

https://hrcak.srce.hr/232038

Publication date:

30.12.2019.

Article data in other languages: croatian

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