Background. The 1918-1919 A/H1N1 influenza pandemic killed ∼50 million people worldwide. Historical records suggest that an early pandemic wave struck Europe during the summer of 1918. Methods. We obtained surveillance data that were compiled weekly, during 1910-1919, in Copenhagen, Denmark; the records included medically treated influenza-like illnesses (ILIs), hospitalizations, and deaths by age. We used a Serfling seasonal regression model to quantify excess morbidity and mortality, and we estimated the reproductive number (R) for the summer, fall, and winter pandemic waves. Results. A large epidemic occurred in Copenhagen during the summer of 1918; the age distribution of deaths was characteristic of the 1918-1919 A/H1N1 pandemic overall. That summer wave accounted for 29%-34% of all excess ILIs and hospitalizations during 1918, whereas the case-fatality rate (0.3%) was many-fold lower than that of the fall wave (2.3%). Similar patterns were observed in 3 other Scandinavian cities. R was substantially higher in summer (2.0 -5.4) than in fall (1.2-1.6) in all cities. Conclusions. The Copenhagen summer wave may have been caused by a precursor A/H1N1 pandemic virus that transmitted efficiently but lacked extreme virulence. The R measured in the summer wave is likely a better approximation of transmissibility in a fully susceptible population and is substantially higher than that found in previous US studies. The summer wave may have provided partial protection against the lethal fall wave. © 2007 by the Infectious Diseases Society of America. All rights reserved.
CITATION STYLE
Andreasen, V., Viboud, C., & Simonsen, L. (2008). Epidemiologic characterization of the 1918 influenza pandemic summer wave in Copenhagen: Implications for pandemic control strategies. Journal of Infectious Diseases, 197(2), 270–278. https://doi.org/10.1086/524065
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