Deadly Pandemics and Epidemics in History in the Last 100 Years

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Deadly Pandemics and Epidemics in History in the Last 100 Years

 

The worst epidemics and pandemics in history have ravaged humanity throughout its existence, but which were the deadliest? In late December 2019, the world was introduced to a novel coronavirus—SARS-CoV-2—a pathogen that causes COVID-19. Just two months later, the World Health Organization (WHO) declared the coronavirus outbreak a pandemic, meaning the virus had spread across several countries and sickened a large number of people. By May 2020, COVID-19 was responsible for over 520 million cases worldwide, according to the WHO. There have been a lot of deadly infectious diseases throughout history, and illnesses like malaria, tuberculosis, influenza, and smallpox have killed hundreds upon thousands over time, ever since humanity’s hunter-gatherer days.

But the shift to agriculture, towns, and cities, made it possible for these illnesses to spread far and wide and become epidemics. However, the very worst case for any disease is when it becomes a pandemic. Unfortunately, with trade and travel, there have been quite a few pandemics across human history.

An epidemic is when a disease rapidly spreads to a large number of people inside a country (or any other given area) in just a short period of time.

A pandemic is when it spreads beyond just a country’s borders. It usually affects people on multiple continents or even worldwide, and a much larger number of people are infected.  Epidemics are an unexpected, often sudden, increase of a specific illness within a community or region. Pandemics are when an epidemic occurs worldwide, crossing international borders and affecting a large number of people.

However, any communicable diseases that recur yearly or seasonally (like winter colds or seasonal flu) aren’t counted as pandemics. Nonetheless, the history of pandemics in the world is one that is long and deadly.

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Here are 31 of the worst pandemics in human history:

 

 

S.N. Name Era Cause/Vector Death Toll Location
1. Plague of Athens 430 BC Yersinia Pestis (Bacterium) 75K – 1 lakh Greece
2. Antonine Plague 165 AD Yersinia Pestis 5 – 10 million Roman Empire
3. Plague of Cyprian 250 – 275 AD Yersinia Pestis Europe
4. Plague of Justinian 541 – 542 AD Yersinia Pestis 50 million Europe and West Africa
5. Japanese small pox (Epidemic) 735 – 737 Variola Virus 2 million Japan
6. The Black death (Plague) 1346 – 1353 Yersinia Pestis 75 – 200 million Europe, Asia and North Africa
7. Smallpox (Epidemic) 1520 Variola Virus 5 – 8 million Mexico
8. Cocoliztil  (Epidemic) 1545 – 1548 Salmonella enterica 5 – 15 million Mexico and Central America
9. Great plague of Marseille 1720 – 1723 Yersinia Pestis 1 lakh France
10. 1st Cholera (Pandemic) 1816 – 1820 Vibrio cholerae (Bacterium) + 1 million Asia, Europe
11. 2nd  Cholera (Pandemic) 1829 – 1851 Vibrio cholerae + 1 million Asia, Europe and North America
12. Asiatic flu / Russian flu 1889 – 1890 Influenza A virus Subtype – H1N1 1 million Worldwide
13. 3rd Cholera (Pandemic) 1852 – 1860 Vibrio cholerae 1 million Asia, Europe, Africa and North America
14. 3rd Plague (Pandemic) 1855 – 1860 Yersinia Pestis >12 million Worldwide (12 million in India & China)
15. Encephalitis Lethargica (Pandemic) 1915 –  1926 Due to autoimmune response with bacterial and viral infections (Uncertain causes) 1.6 million Worldwide
16. Spanish flu 1918 – 1920 Influenza A virus Subtype – H1N1 17 – 50 million Worldwide
17. Asian flu 1956 – 1958 Influenza A virus Subtype – H2N2 2 million Worldwide
18. The Hong Kong flu 1968 – 1969 Influenza A virus Subtype – H3N2 1 million Worldwide
19. Typhus / Camp fever / Gaol fever / Ship fever / Jail fever 1918 – 1922 Rickettsia prowazekii (Bacterium) 3 million Burundi, Rwanda, Algeria and a few areas of South and Central America
20. Smallpox 20th Century Variola Virus 300 – 500 million Worldwide
21. Measles 9th Century – Till now Measles morbillivirus 2 lakh/yr Worldwide
22. Tuberculosis 17000 years ago – Till now Mycobacterium tuberculosis 15 lakh/yr Worldwide
23. Leprosy Since 600 BC (Mainly in 11th century) Mycobacterium leprae 17-18 million Mainly in Europe
24. Yellow fever (Epidemic) 1793 Flavivirus 5000 (approx.) Philadelphia, New York and Boston
25. AIDS 1976 (Firstly) – Till now Human immunodeficiency virus (HIV) 8 – 10 lakh Worldwide
26. SARS – CoV (Severe Acute Respiratory Syndrome) (Epidemic) 2003 Coronavirus (β – CoV) 774 out of 8000 cases Southern China, Canada, Singapore and Vietnam
27. Swine flu 2009 – 2010 H1N1 Virus (Influenza A) Swine Influenza Virus (SIV) 18000 Worldwide (1st outbreak – Mexico)
28. MERS – CoV (Middle East Respiratory Syndrome) 2012 Coronavirus (β – CoV) 858 Saudi Arabia and areas of Middle East
29. Ebola  (Epidemic) 2014 – 2016 Ebola Virus 11310 West Africa
30. Zika Virus Disease 2015 – 2016 Zika Virus 50 – 100 Brazil, South & North America
31. Coronavirus Disease – 2019  (Covid-19) 2019 – Till now Corona Virus 25 Lakh (Till now) Worldwide
READ MORE :  Control & Eradication of Rabies in India

DR SK RAY CHAUDHARY,BAU

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