Lessons from the 1918 pandemic: A U.S. city's past may hold clues
How politicians and the public in Denver, Colorado handled the 1918 flu epidemic is relevant to today.
J. Alexander Navarro, Professor of History of Medicine, University of Michigan
• conversation
July 6, 2020 • ~7 min
July 6, 2020 • ~7 min
Lethargic global response to COVID-19: How the human brain's failure to assess abstract threats cost us dearly
Human beings have difficulty assessing distant threats.
Cristian Capotescu, Doctoral Candidate, Department of History, University of Michigan
• conversation
April 27, 2020 • ~6 min
April 27, 2020 • ~6 min
How Australia's response to the Spanish flu of 1919 sounds warnings on dealing with coronavirus
Bickering between the states and Victoria's initial silence on the outbreak made the 1919 Spanish flu pandemic worse.
Frank Bongiorno, Professor of History, ANU College of Arts and Social Sciences, Australian National University
• conversation
March 22, 2020 • ~11 min
March 22, 2020 • ~11 min
10 misconceptions about the 1918 flu, the 'greatest pandemic in history'
The so-called 'Spanish flu' didn't actually come from Spain. What else do people often misunderstand about this famous crisis?
Richard Gunderman, Chancellor's Professor of Medicine, Liberal Arts, and Philanthropy, Indiana University
• conversation
March 17, 2020 • ~9 min
March 17, 2020 • ~9 min
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