Some are very deadly such as Avian (Bird) Flu which has a 50% to 60% mortality rate but, thankfully, it is rare overall and not transmitted from person to person except very rarely. Others are much less deadly, such as H1N1/09, but in that specific flu, it is very easily transmitted from person to person, so while it kills fewer than seasonal flu, there are many more people infected causing other impacts to society.
The mortality rates in H1N1/09 (Swine Flu) from the start in April 2009 to February 2010, caused in the US approximately 57 million cases of A-H1N1/09 Pandemic Swine Flu and approximately 11,690 resulting deaths. Based upon this, an estimate of the mortality rate in the US from the pandemic "Swine Flu" is 0.02%.
In comparison, the CDC and World Health Organization (WHO) have estimated that with seasonal flu, "we see over 30 million cases in the United States. We see 200,000 hospitalizations and, on average, 36,000 deaths." (During the entire fall and winter flu season.) Based upon this, the average mortality rate of seasonal flu in the US would be 0.12 %.
Its when babies and the elderly get it that it turns deadly.
Influenza is a disease that can kill you.
Yes, it causes a respiratory infection and can lead to deadly secondary respiratory infections.
Influenza is a viral infection - it is caused by a virus, not a bacterium.
The Spanish Influenza
Influenza is an infectious disease also commonly known as Flu. Itβs an acute respiratory infection caused by Influenza Virus A and Virus B. Central BioHub's is an online biospecimen marketplace. It offers high-quality, well-defined influenza disease biospecimens collected from patients suffering from influenza infections. To check more visit our website.
its the same with influenza ahhaha simple
Influenza
Smallpox #1 disease, followed by influenza and others
Yes, it causes a respiratory infection and can lead to deadly secondary respiratory infections.
Typhoid Fever its self is a nickname. The real name for it is Enteric Fever
he Spanish Flu Pandemic, also known as La Grippe Espagnole, or La Pesadilla, was an unusually severe and deadly strain of avian influenza, a viral infectious disease, that killed some 50 million to 100 million people worldwide over about a year in 1918 and 1919 It is thought to have been one of the most deadly pandemics so far in human history. It was caused by the H1N1 type of influenza virus, which is similar to bird flu of today, mainly H5N1 and H5N2.
Edwin D. Kilbourne has written: 'The Influenza viruses and influenza' -- subject(s): Influenza, Influenza viruses 'Influenza' -- subject(s): Influenza, Influenza viruses, Orthomyxoviridae
Fungi do not cause influenza. Viruses Cause influenza.
influenza, flue
There is none since "flu" is already an abbreviation for "influenza".
Influenza is a viral infection - it is caused by a virus, not a bacterium.
Flu stands for influenza. As you can tell, it's just a shortened version of the word.
Influenza is a noun.