The sociological and biological factors which gave rise to the three pandemic waves of Spanish influenza in England during 1918–19 are still poorly understood. Symptom reporting data available for a limited set of locations in England indicates that reinfection in multiple waves occurred, suggesting a role for loss of infection-acquired immunity. Here we explore the role that changes in host immunity, driven by a combination of within-host factors and viral evolution, may play in explaining weekly mortality data and wave-by-wave symptomatic attack-rates available for a subset of English cities. Our results indicate that changes in the phenotype of the pandemic virus are likely required to explain the closely spaced waves of infection, but d...
BACKGROUND: The causes of recurrent waves in the 1918-1919 influenza pandemic are not fully understo...
It is widely accepted that the shift in case-fatality rate between waves during the 1918 influenza p...
It is widely accepted that the shift in case-fatality rate between waves during the 1918 influenza p...
AbstractThe sociological and biological factors which gave rise to the three pandemic waves of Spani...
AbstractThe sociological and biological factors which gave rise to the three pandemic waves of Spani...
The sociological and biological factors which gave rise to the three pandemic waves of Spanish influ...
Background: The ecology of influenza may be more complex than is usually assumed. For example, despi...
Background: The ecology of influenza may be more complex than is usually assumed. For example, despi...
BACKGROUND: The ecology of influenza may be more complex than is usually assumed. For example, despi...
BACKGROUND: It is widely accepted that the shift in case-fatality rate between waves during the 191...
BACKGROUND: It is widely accepted that the shift in case-fatality rate between waves during the 191...
AbstractEpidemiological models of influenza transmission usually assume that recovered individuals i...
Background: The clinical attack rate of influenza is influenced by prior immunity and mixing pattern...
BACKGROUND: It is widely accepted that the shift in case-fatality rate between waves during the 1918...
The 1918 influenza pandemic was one of the most devastating and enigmatic infectious disease outbrea...
BACKGROUND: The causes of recurrent waves in the 1918-1919 influenza pandemic are not fully understo...
It is widely accepted that the shift in case-fatality rate between waves during the 1918 influenza p...
It is widely accepted that the shift in case-fatality rate between waves during the 1918 influenza p...
AbstractThe sociological and biological factors which gave rise to the three pandemic waves of Spani...
AbstractThe sociological and biological factors which gave rise to the three pandemic waves of Spani...
The sociological and biological factors which gave rise to the three pandemic waves of Spanish influ...
Background: The ecology of influenza may be more complex than is usually assumed. For example, despi...
Background: The ecology of influenza may be more complex than is usually assumed. For example, despi...
BACKGROUND: The ecology of influenza may be more complex than is usually assumed. For example, despi...
BACKGROUND: It is widely accepted that the shift in case-fatality rate between waves during the 191...
BACKGROUND: It is widely accepted that the shift in case-fatality rate between waves during the 191...
AbstractEpidemiological models of influenza transmission usually assume that recovered individuals i...
Background: The clinical attack rate of influenza is influenced by prior immunity and mixing pattern...
BACKGROUND: It is widely accepted that the shift in case-fatality rate between waves during the 1918...
The 1918 influenza pandemic was one of the most devastating and enigmatic infectious disease outbrea...
BACKGROUND: The causes of recurrent waves in the 1918-1919 influenza pandemic are not fully understo...
It is widely accepted that the shift in case-fatality rate between waves during the 1918 influenza p...
It is widely accepted that the shift in case-fatality rate between waves during the 1918 influenza p...