Pandemic: How the Flu Changed Wales - Then and Now
As the world battles Covid-19, Professor John Oxford looks at how the flu pandemic of 1918-19 affected the people of Wales.
As the world battles the coronavirus pandemic, Professor John Oxford, one of the world’s leading virologists, examines how the last truly global pandemic affected Wales.
It’s estimated between 50 and 100 million people died in three outbreaks of the so-called ‘Spanish Flu’ which hit in 1918 and 1919. It remains the most devastating pandemic in modern history and to this day, scientists are still trying to pinpoint its origins.
More people died than perished in World War One and Two combined. It even killed more than the bubonic plague, yet in many parts of the world it is virtually forgotten. But now the story of the 1918/19 pandemic is more relevant than ever!
We hear how otherwise healthy soldiers returning safely from war to Wales would be dead within three or four days, how whole families would be wiped out in a week and how the authorities in different parts of Wales struggled to cope with looking after the sick and burying their dead on such a huge scale.
The deadly flu was different but yet similar to the coronavirus in the way it affected the respiratory system. People would turn blue or purple and often succumb to pneumonia in a time before the discovery of antibiotics. Many nurses and doctors became part of the death toll in Wales.
John looks through the archives and traces its emergence and spread through Wales. We hear real and dramatised testimony as we examine how the people of Wales coped with an even bigger pandemic than the one we're experiencing today.
Pandemic: How the Flu Changed Wales is produced by Ashley Byrne and Iain Mackness
The programme is an MIM Production for ´óÏó´«Ã½ Radio Wales.
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Broadcast
- Mon 25 May 2020 18:00´óÏó´«Ã½ Radio Wales