With the Covid 19 virus taking so much attention currently, it is captivating though imprecise to look back at the killer flu of the year 1918 is specifically interesting since human influencer flu appeared to be a viral platform from the time the disease sprang. The movie places the foundation of the epidemic on the United States Midwest army base, though that concept has been dumped. As the science of this documentary is unreliable, its justification of the destruction is sobering. The American main streets are seen lined with coffins piles, as the emergency workers putting on surgical masks, among other things (American-experience-influenza-1918). A branch of microbiology that studies diseases and viruses was in a primitive condition for the past 90 years, and part of the upsetting treatments sounds awful as the disease itself. The medical science becomes unable to deal with the flu that got victims very healthy during breakfast, and by supper time, they were dead.
The virus came as a disastrous epilogue to the First World War. The current research shows that the still- mysterious alteration might have advanced its deadly virulence in the infected killing fields of the western front of Europe. As the virus went viral across the world, hospitals were overfilled, death wagons wandered while helpless cities dug mass graves. This became the worst epidemic that killed over six hundred American citizens and left the global death toll to an approximation of fifty million. At last, the flu disappeared as without explanation as it had started (American-experience-influenza-1918).
In conclusion, this film takes the audience back to September 1918 when solders at their army base close to Boston began to die. The source of the ailment was identified as an influencer, with its strains seen unfamiliar. It was the worst pandemic in the United States since it killed over six hundred thousand Americans and approximately 50 million deaths across the world.