With all of the Coronavirus talk and the natural comparison of its fatality compared with the annual flu, it occurred to me that I don’t actually know anyone who has died from the flu.
It’s possible that someone I knew did die from the flu and it simply didn’t register to me as anything more specific than “old age” or “complications” and it’s also possible that I simply don’t know enough people in the demographic that typically dies from the flu. I’m wondering how many other people here know of people who definitively were killed by a flu?
My Great Grandmother.
I mean she was like 98 but I did know her. It was the flu which got her (even money, she got it from one of my cousins, we all had it)
Ironically her own mother died of the Spanish flu when she was a child.
It’s possible some of the older people in the neighborhood where I grew up have. I know at least one of my dad’s siblings is thought to have died of the Spanish Flu (died in 1918-1919 as a toddler), which means he never met them.
In a roundabout way. My mom developed pneumonia from the flu and it left her with congestive heart failure, which was a very long slow and painful death over the next ten years. However she didn’t do somet of the things that could have extended her life, like lose weight.
A lot of people don’t think about long-term complications, it’s all about the immediate death count. How many lives have been shortened by influenza though?
I selected the “plausible” option. I don’t know for sure that any of my acquaintances has died of the flu, but many folks my grandparents’ age or older have died of “old age”. There are probably some influenza deaths in that number.
Another vote for “plausible”. I was going to say no, since I’m not aware of anyone who has died from the flu, but I don’t know the details of how any of my elderly relatives died other than “old age”. I can’t say with 100% certainty that the the flu had nothing to do with any of their deaths, and with the way you worded the questions I guess that means I have to go with plausible.
Selected plausible because someone died of HIV related complications but I don’t really know the actual cause of death and his family definitely won’t tell me.
In the late 1990s, a co-worker in his early 50s who seemed to be generally in good health went home on a Friday feeling slightly off, went to bed, spent Saturday horribly ill, and found dead in his bed on Sunday. Diagnosis influenza.
This describes the one person I’ve know who died from influenza, although in her case, she died 2 years ago. She had multiple pre-existing health issues which included an autoimmune disease, and was admitted to the hospital with multiple organ failure and died shortly afterwards.
We all miss her, but her death wasn’t a big surprise.
Yes, my grandmother died of the flu that turned into pneumonia, 25 years ago. She was only 62 and had been previously in good health, no pre-existing conditions. Everybody thought she should get better but for whatever reason, she didn’t.
I was only 7 at the time but I remember visiting her. It was Thanksgiving Day. We had our holiday meal in the hospital cafeteria and I had a plastic bowl of ham salad. She was awake when we visited and I remember her mouthing “I love you” to me around the ventilator tube when I was brought into the room. That was the last time I saw her alive. We went home and the next day we got a call from my grandfather that she was gone.
My other grandmother got strep in the days before penicillin was discovered and developed rheumatic fever and heart valve damage that caused all sorts of complications later in life and eventually led to her demise. So 0 for 2 on the “grandmothers with illnesses that should have been relatively mild” front.