death Boogaard Family Files Wrongful Death Lawsuit Against NHL By www.24-7pressrelease.com Published On :: Wed, 22 May 2013 07:00:00 GMT Derek Boogaard's family filed a wrongful-death lawsuit against the National Hockey League. Full Article
death "Carfentanil and the Grey Death": Exclusive New Video Training from In the Line of Duty By www.24-7pressrelease.com Published On :: Sat, 08 Jul 2017 07:00:00 GMT In the Line of Duty, the world leading producer of law enforcement video and internet training, announces its newest and life-saving training program. Full Article
death Primary Children's Hospital Offers Free Safety Devices to Prevent Heat-Related Injuries, Deaths in Hot Cars By www.24-7pressrelease.com Published On :: Fri, 21 Jun 2019 07:00:00 GMT Intermountain Primary Children's Hospital is reminding drivers to never leave a child in a vehicle Full Article
death After Toddler's Tragic Choking Death, Dechoker Offers Peace of Mind By www.24-7pressrelease.com Published On :: Mon, 04 Nov 2019 07:00:00 GMT Anti-choking device has saved 112 lives worldwide Full Article
death Tragic death of child pedestrian in Harlem raises safety concerns anew By www.24-7pressrelease.com Published On :: Sat, 16 Mar 2013 07:00:00 GMT The sad death of a six-year-old on his way to school who was run over by a semi truck in East Harlem has raised emotions and highlighted the awareness of New Yorkers to the dangers associated with living in a huge city. Full Article
death Missouri trucking accident results in two deaths By www.24-7pressrelease.com Published On :: Tue, 09 Apr 2013 07:00:00 GMT Driver fatigue is now suspected as a contributing factor in a deadly trucking accident that recently left two dead in southwestern Missouri. Full Article
death Simon's Heart and Nikomed Team Up to Raise Awareness of Screening to Prevent Sudden Cardiac Death in Kids By www.24-7pressrelease.com Published On :: Wed, 12 Feb 2020 07:00:00 GMT A chance encounter led to an ideal partnership Full Article
death A Death In The Family - Montreal Author Laura Prince Offers Words Of Wisdom For Canadians Affected By Iranian Aircraft Tragedy By www.24-7pressrelease.com Published On :: Wed, 29 Jan 2020 07:00:00 GMT Laura Prince's new book detailing the death of her brother has been called "insightful", "powerful" "vivid" "absorbing" and "spellbinding". Full Article
death Moirar M. Leveille launches her new book "Mind Your Health, or Mind Your Death - Choose Your Path: A Journey from Autoimmune Disease to Vibrant Health Without Drugs" By www.24-7pressrelease.com Published On :: Sun, 15 Dec 2019 07:00:00 GMT Book Become International Best Seller Full Article
death Viral Ignorance Is Bringing Avoidable Bondage, Poverty And Death Says Dr Richard Ruhling By www.24-7pressrelease.com Published On :: Sun, 22 Mar 2020 07:00:00 GMT Ruhling is an expert on Healthcare which he says is inversely related to medical care Full Article
death As World Struggles with New Pandemic, College HUNKS ® Honors Ryan White's AIDS Legacy on the 30-Year Anniversary of His Death with 'Hope' Sculpture by Bill Mack By www.24-7pressrelease.com Published On :: Tue, 28 Apr 2020 07:00:00 GMT Moving Franchise Displays Newly Discovered Rare Sculpture at World Headquarters to Offer Inspiration to the Community and Recognize the Ongoing Fight Against HIV/AIDS, Discrimination and COVID-19 Pandemic Full Article
death France says total death toll from coronavirus rises by 80 to 26,310 By www.firstpost.com Published On :: Sat, 09 May 2020 18:43:07 +0000 PARIS (Reuters) - The number of people who have died from coronavirus infections in France rose by 80 to 26,310 on Saturday, the health ministry said, a much smaller daily increase than the previous day when it was 243. The ministry said the number of people in intensive care units - a key measure of a health system's ability to deal with the epidemic - fell by 56, or about 2%, to 2,812. That is less than half the peak of 7,148 seen on April 8 The post France says total death toll from coronavirus rises by 80 to 26,310 appeared first on Firstpost. Full Article World Reuters
death India’s COVID-19 tally reaches 59,662, deaths near 2,000; fresh cases among repatriated Indians, paramilitary forces emerges as a major concern By www.firstpost.com Published On :: Sat, 09 May 2020 19:07:58 +0000 The nationwide tally of confirmed COVID-19 cases reached 59,662 on Saturday and the death toll rose to 1,981 with the country registering an increase of 95 deaths and 3,320 cases in 24 hours till Saturday morning, the Union Health Ministry said The post India’s COVID-19 tally reaches 59,662, deaths near 2,000; fresh cases among repatriated Indians, paramilitary forces emerges as a major concern appeared first on Firstpost. Full Article Health Agra Andhra Pradesh Bhopal Chennai Chinese testing kits coronavirus coronavirus in ahmedabad coronavirus in delhi coronavirus in hyderabad coronavirus in india Coronavirus in Indore Coronavirus in Jaipur coronavirus in Mumbai coronavirus in pune Coronavirus lockdown Coronavirus outbreak Coronavirus Pandemic coronavirus testing coronavirus testing kit coronavirus tests Coronavius in India COVID-19 COVID-19 Chinese testing kits COVID-19 outbreak COVID-19 pandemic COVID-19 Testing Kits COVID-19 tests Delhi EEU European Economic Union Gujarat ICMR Jodhpur Kurnool lockdown Madhya Pradesh Maharashtra National Institute of Virology NewsTracker NIV Punjab Rajasthan rapid testing kits Surat Tamil Nadu Thane Uttar Pradesh Vadodara
death Productivity, Multitasking, and the Death of the Phone By hbr.org Published On :: Thu, 31 Mar 2011 18:24:03 -0500 Sherry Turkle, MIT professor and author of "Alone Together: Why We Expect More from Technology and Less from Each Other." Full Article
death 359- Life and Death in Singapore By 99percentinvisible.org Published On :: Tue, 25 Jun 2019 23:55:35 -0000 When Singapore gained its independence they went on a mission to re-house the population from densely-packed thatched roof huts into giant concrete skyscrapers. In 1960, they formed the Housing and Development Board, or HDB, and just five years later they had already housed 400,000 people! In Singapore, where land is scarce, it’s not unlikely for apartment buildings to be built on top of land that was graveyards not too long ago. But building on top of a graveyard has its complications. Life and Death in Singapore Full Article cemeteries columbarium ghost graveyard housing public housing singapore urban design
death SCCM Pod-85 PCCM: Organ Donation After Cardiac Death - Part 1 By sccm-audio.s3.amazonaws.com Published On :: Wed, 10 Oct 2007 15:16:00 -0500 Peter C. Laussen, MD, discusses an article published in the May 2007 issue of Pediatric Critical Care Medicine, titled "Pediatric Staff Perspectives on Organ Donation After Cardiac Death in Children." Dr. Laussen is director of the cardiac intensive care unit at Children's Hospital Boston. This is the first podcast in a two-part interview. Part two will feature an interview with lead author Martha A.Q. Curley, RN, PhD. (Ped. Crit. Care Med. 2007;8[3]:212). Full Article Medicine
death SCCM Pod-88 PCCM: Organ Donation After Cardiac Death - Part 2 By sccm-audio.s3.amazonaws.com Published On :: Thu, 17 Jan 2008 16:18:00 -0500 Martha A.Q. Curley, RN, PhD, associate professor of nursing, anesthesia and critical care medicine at the University of Pennsylvania and nurse scientist at Children’s Hospital in Boston, discusses an article published in the May 2007 issue of Pediatric Critical Care Medicine, "Pediatric staff perspectives on organ donation after cardiac death in children." (Ped. Crit. Care Med. 2007;8[3]:212). Full Article Medicine
death SCCM Pod-300 Timing of Death in Children Referred for Intensive Care with Severe Sepsis By sccm-audio.s3.amazonaws.com Published On :: Thu, 05 Nov 2015 10:20:00 -0500 Margaret Parker, MD, MCCM, speaks with Mirjana Cvetkovic, FRCA. Dr. Cvetkovic works as a Clinical Fellow at the Children's Acute Transport Service at Great Ormond Street Hospital in London and a Consultant Intensivist in Anesthesia at Leicester Hospital. Full Article Medicine
death SCCM Pod-355 The Epidemiology of Hospital Death Following Pediatric Severe Sepsis By sccm-audio.s3.amazonaws.com Published On :: Thu, 07 Dec 2017 23:50:00 -0500 Margaret Parker, MD, MCCM, speaks with Scott L. Weiss, MD, MSCE, about the article, The Epidemiology of Hospital Death Following Pediatric Severe Sepsis: When, Why, and How Children With Sepsis Die, published in the September 2017 issue of Pediatric Critical Care Medicine. Full Article Medicine
death Force majeure clause won't apply to coronavirus death claims in life insurance policies By economictimes.indiatimes.com Published On :: 2020-04-06T12:03:44+05:30 The Council also confirmed that the clause of ‘Force Majeure’ will not apply in case of COVID-19 death claims. This step was taken to reassure customers who had reached out to individual life insurance companies seeking clarity on this clause. Full Article
death Delhi BJP seeks Arvind Kejriwal's clarification over "underreporting" of Covid deaths in capital By economictimes.indiatimes.com Published On :: 2020-05-09T21:46:18+05:30 Delhi BJP president Manoj Tiwari on Saturday expressed concern over reports of "underreporting" of deaths due to Covid-19 in Delhi and asked Chief Minister Arvind Kejriwal to clear the air about it. Full Article
death No reason to hide anything: Delhi health minister over 'under-reporting' of COVID-19 deaths By economictimes.indiatimes.com Published On :: 2020-05-09T22:38:31+05:30 Confusion prevailed over the number of COVID-19 deaths in Delhi, with data from four hospitals showing that 92 people succumbed to the infection as against 68 reported by the government. Full Article
death US adds 1,635 coronavirus deaths in 24 hours: Tracker By economictimes.indiatimes.com Published On :: 2020-05-09T08:46:40+05:30 The country -- hardest hit by the pandemic in terms of the number of fatalities -- has now confirmed a total of 1,283,829 cases, Johns Hopkins University reported. Full Article
death Coronavirus in West Bengal: 11 deaths, 108 fresh cases reported in last 24 hours By economictimes.indiatimes.com Published On :: 2020-05-09T22:40:44+05:30 Coronavirus in West Bengal: 11 deaths, 108 fresh cases reported in last 24 hours Full Article
death Justice Department Charges Two Defendants with Carjacking and Carrying a Firearm in Relation to a Crime of Violence in Connection with the Death of Two Transgender Individuals By www.justice.gov Published On :: Fri, 01 May 2020 00:00:00 -0400 The Justice Department announced today that Juan Carlos Pagán Bonilla (Pagan), 21, and Sean Díaz de León (Diaz), 19, have been charged by a criminal complaint in federal district court with carjacking and with using and carrying a firearm during and in relation to a crime of violence in connection with the death of two transgender individuals. Pagan and Diaz are now in federal custody. Full Article
death Mayor Catherine Pugh Discusses The Death Of Officer Sean Suiter By www.wbal.com Published On :: 2017-11-18T19:00:00 Mayor Catherine Pugh joins Jimmy Mathis to discuss the death of the Baltimore police officer Sean Suiter and how to best combat Crime in Baltimore. Full Article
death National coronavirus updates: Hard-hit areas restrict testing as coronavirus death toll grows in US By www.wbal.com Published On :: 2020-03-22T07:38:00 In the U.S., there are at least 25,000 cases across all 50 states, plus Puerto Rico, the U.S. Virgin Islands and Washington D.C. At least 323 have died from the virus. Full Article
death Baltimore Mayor Young Confirms City's First Two Coronavirus-Related Deaths By www.wbal.com Published On :: 2020-03-29T07:32:00 In a statement Saturday, Mayor Bernard C. “Jack” Young said that two individuals had died, a woman in her 60s and another woman in her 80s. Full Article
death President Trump Extends Coronavirus Guidelines, Braces US For Big Death Toll By www.wbal.com Published On :: 2020-03-30T08:05:00 Bracing the nation for a death toll that could exceed 100,000 people, President Trump on Sunday extended restrictive social distancing guidelines through April. Full Article
death MD Department Of Health: Five New Deaths Related To Coronavirus Confirmed On Sunday By www.wbal.com Published On :: 2020-03-30T08:10:00 The Maryland Department of Health on Sunday announced five new deaths as a result of COVID-19. Full Article
death New York Times: One-Third of All U.S. Coronavirus Deaths Are Nursing Home Residents or Workers By rbfirehose.com Published On :: Sat, 09 May 2020 16:54:17 +0000 New York Times: One-Third of All U.S. Coronavirus Deaths Are Nursing Home Residents or Workers. “At least 25,600 residents and workers have died from the coronavirus at nursing homes and other long-term care facilities for older adults in the United States, according to a New York Times database. The virus so far has infected more … Continue reading New York Times: One-Third of All U.S. Coronavirus Deaths Are Nursing Home Residents or Workers Full Article COVID-19 coronavirus nursing homes older adults public health senior citizens
death ‘Finally, a virus got me.’ Scientist who fought Ebola and HIV reflects on facing death from COVID-19 (Science Magazine) By rbfirehose.com Published On :: Sat, 09 May 2020 18:58:31 +0000 Science Magazine: ‘Finally, a virus got me.’ Scientist who fought Ebola and HIV reflects on facing death from COVID-19. “Virologist Peter Piot, director of the London School of Hygiene & Tropical Medicine, fell ill with COVID-19 in mid-March. He spent a week in a hospital and has been recovering at his home in London since. … Continue reading ‘Finally, a virus got me.’ Scientist who fought Ebola and HIV reflects on facing death from COVID-19 (Science Magazine) Full Article COVID-19 coronavirus expertise interviews Peter Piot public health
death Jury Convicts Teen In Death Of Baltimore County Police Officer By www.wbal.com Published On :: 2019-05-02T09:40:00 Prosecutors said sentencing is set for July 23. Dawnta Harris faces life in prison on the felony murder conviction alone, with up to five years for auto theft and 20 years for first-degree burglary. Full Article
death Minnesota deaths up 24, to 558, in COVID-19 pandemic By www.startribune.com Published On :: 2020-05-09T17:28:34+00:00 The pandemic has caused 558 deaths across Minnesota. Residents of long-term care and assisted living facilities account for roughly four out of every five across the state. The confirmed case count grew to 10,790. Full Article
death State Fines La Plata Nursing Home With Most COVID-19 Deaths By www.wbal.com Published On :: 2020-05-07T19:55:00 Dozens of residents and staff members have tested positive for the virus. Full Article
death President Trump Extends Coronavirus Guidelines, Braces US For Big Death Toll By www.wbal.com Published On :: 2020-03-30T08:05:00 Bracing the nation for a death toll that could exceed 100,000 people, President Trump on Sunday extended restrictive social distancing guidelines through April. Full Article
death MD Department Of Health: Five New Deaths Related To Coronavirus Confirmed On Sunday By www.wbal.com Published On :: 2020-03-30T08:10:00 The Maryland Department of Health on Sunday announced five new deaths as a result of COVID-19. Full Article
death Man falls to his death in Grand Canyon â“ two women hit by lightning on Friday By www.nps.gov Published On :: Sun, 03 Oct 2010 20:00:00 EST https://www.nps.gov/grca/learn/news/4oct10-news.htm Full Article
death Grand Canyon National Park Expresses Deepest Condolences on 19 Firefighter Deaths By www.nps.gov Published On :: Mon, 01 Jul 2013 04:02:00 EST Grand Canyon National Park and the entire National Park Service join the nation in mourning the tragic loss of 19 firefighters, including 18 elite firefighters from the Granite Mountain Hotshot Crew based in Prescott, AZ. https://www.nps.gov/grca/learn/news/grand-canyon-national-park-expresses-deepest-condolences-on-19-firefighter-deaths.htm Full Article
death Latest Newmarch resident death not virus By www.geelongadvertiser.com.au Published On :: A resident who died in Sydney's Newmarch House had recovered from coronavirus and died of an unrelated illness, NSW Health says. Full Article
death Number of coronavirus deaths at Surrey hospital trusts rise to 980 By www.getsurrey.co.uk Published On :: Fri, 08 May 2020 14:22:01 GMT The latest figures have been announced by NHS England Full Article Home
death Number of coronavirus deaths at Surrey hospital trusts rise to 983 By www.getsurrey.co.uk Published On :: Sat, 09 May 2020 14:03:27 GMT The latest NHS figures show a small increase in recorded deaths Full Article Home
death Police 'not treating Reigate death as suspicious' following post-mortem By www.getsurrey.co.uk Published On :: Sat, 09 May 2020 17:11:37 GMT Officers found the body of a woman in her 40s on Friday morning Full Article Home
death Five further Covid-19 related deaths recorded in Northern Ireland By www.belfastlive.co.uk Published On :: Fri, 8 May 2020 13:10:41 +0000 A total of 30,613 individuals have now been tested for the virus Full Article Belfast News
death Four further Covid-19 related deaths recorded in Northern Ireland By www.belfastlive.co.uk Published On :: Sat, 9 May 2020 15:23:03 +0000 The Department of Health released the latest figures this afternoon Full Article News
death Better science needed to support clinical predictors that link cardiac arrest, brain injury, and death: a statement from the American Heart Association By newsroom.heart.org Published On :: Thu, 11 Jul 2019 09:00:00 GMT Statement Highlights: While significant improvements have been made in resuscitation and post cardiac arrest resuscitation care, mortality remains high and is mainly attributed to widespread brain injury.Better science is needed to support the ... Full Article
death Deaths from Fall-Related Traumatic Brain Injury — United States, 2008-2017 By feedproxy.google.com Published On :: Fri, 06 Mar 2020 10:22:43 EST The national age-adjusted rate of fall-related TBI deaths increased by 17% from 2008 to 2017; rates increased significantly in 29 states and among nearly all groups, most notably persons living in noncore nonmetropolitan counties and those aged ≥75 years. Full Article
death ‘Death stalked swiftly’ in 1918. What will we remember now? By feedproxy.google.com Published On :: Thu, 07 May 2020 21:01:29 PDT In August 1919, the Cedar Rapids Evening Gazette opined in favor of the passage of a $5 million congressional appropriation to “investigate influenza, its cause, prevention and... Full Article Staff Columnist
death ‘Death stalked swiftly’ in 1918. What will we remember now? By www.thegazette.com Published On :: Fri, 8 May 2020 00:01:29 -0400 In August 1919, the Cedar Rapids Evening Gazette opined in favor of the passage of a $5 million congressional appropriation to “investigate influenza, its cause, prevention and cure.”“We all remember without effort the darkness and terror which engulfed the land last fall and winter as death stalked swiftly from seaboard to seaboard, into crowded city and unto lonely plain, sparing not the cottage of the poor nor the mansion of the rich,” the editorial said. “In four short months, influenza claimed a half million lives and pressed millions of others onto beds of sickness, suffering and helplessness. The nation’s mortality rate leapt high and with astounding speed. The nation was unprepared to cope with a disease calamity such as it has never known.”The Gazette lamented that billions of dollars in loss were wrought by the pandemic of so-called Spanish influenza, compared with only $5 million being spent to investigate the virus. “More has been spent in studying diseases of hogs,” the editorial argued.Just less than a year earlier, The Evening Gazette did not see “darkness and terror” coming. A front page, above-the-fold story Sept. 25, 1918, asked: “Spanish Influenza just the old-fashioned grippe?” “Grippe” is an old-time term for the flu, by the way.“As a matter of fact, in the opinion of City Physician Beardsley, and a good many other Cedar Rapids men in the same profession, Spanish influenza is just another name for the regular old fashioned influenza and is no different from the influenza we have always had. A bad cold is a bad cold, and a worse cold is grippe, which covers a multitude of things ...,” The Gazette reported, optimistically. An earlier strain of influenza in the spring of 1918 had been less virulent and deadly. But the second wave was no ordinary grippe.By mid-October, according to reports in The Evening Gazette, influenza caseloads exploded. On Oct. 12, 1918, the local health board shut down pool rooms, billiard halls and bowling alleys. It pleaded with store owners to avoid allowing crowds to linger. On Oct. 16, stores were ordered to discontinue any special sales that might draw more shoppers. Restrictions tightened as the pandemic worsened. Death notices were stacking up on Gazette pages, in rows reminiscent of small tombstones. Many victims were cut down in the prime of life by a virus that struck young, healthy people hardest. Mothers and fathers died, leaving young children. Soldiers serving in World War I died far away from home. Visitors to town never returned home. Young brothers died and were mourned at a double funeral. A sister who came to care for a sick brother died, and so did her brother.Ray Franklin Minburn, 24, died of influenza, leaving behind six sisters and two brothers. “Mr. Minburn was a faithful son, a devoted companion, a good neighbor,” concluded his death announcement on Oct. 21, 1918. On the same page that day came news, tucked among the tombstones, reporting that Iowa Gov. William Harding had recovered from influenza, in the midst of his reelection campaign, and was back in the office. You might remember Harding as the governor who banned German and other languages during World War I and who was nearly impeached for bribery in 1919. Not far from Harding’s update came news from the prison in Anamosa that “whisky and quinine” were being deployed to attack the grippe. The pages of The Evening Gazette also were dotted with advertisements for supposed cures and treatments. “Danger of infection from influenza or any contagious disease can be eliminated by using preventive measures,” prescribed by Ruby S. Thompson, chiropractor and naturopathic physician. Those included “Sulphur-vapor baths, Carlsbad mineral bath.”You could build up your blood using “Gude’s Pepto-Mangan,” the “Red Blood Builder.” Keep your strength up with Horlick’s Malted Milk. One ad looked exactly like a news story, carrying the bold headline “Druggists still asked to conserve stocks of VapoRub needed in ‘flu’ districts.” In a tiny notation at the end of the “story” were the words “The Vicks Chemical Co.” That August 1919 Gazette editorial I mentioned makes me wonder what we’ll be writing in a year or so after our current pandemic. Death stalking us swiftly from seaboard to seaboard in an unprepared nation, preceded by the casual insistence it’s no worse than the seasonal flu, sounds eerily familiar in 2020. More attention is being paid to hogs than the health of humans working in meatpacking plants.Will we be writing in 2021 how reopening states and counties too soon led to our own second wave? Here in Iowa, reopening began before we had a fully working predictive model to chart the pandemic’s course and before new testing efforts had a chance to ramp up. Will decisions made without crucial information look smart in 2021? Or will we wish we’d waited just a couple more weeks?What of the protesters demanding liberation? What about the president, running for reelection in a nation harmed by his crisis mismanagement? What will a new normal look like? Will there be newspapers around to editorialize in the aftermath? After all, most of the pitches for fake cures are online now, some even extolled at White House briefings.And will we be better prepared next time? I bet editorial writers in 1919 figured we’d have this pandemic response thing down to a science by now.Little did they know that in 2020 we’d have so little respect for science. And after a century-plus, the darkness and terror apparently slipped our minds. (319) 398-8262; todd.dorman@thegazette.com Full Article Staff Columnist
death ‘Death stalked swiftly’ in 1918. What will we remember now? By feedproxy.google.com Published On :: Thu, 07 May 2020 21:01:29 PDT In August 1919, the Cedar Rapids Evening Gazette opined in favor of the passage of a $5 million congressional appropriation to “investigate influenza, its cause, prevention and cure.”“We all remember without effort the darkness and terror which engulfed the land last fall and winter as death stalked swiftly from seaboard to seaboard, into crowded city and unto lonely plain, sparing not the cottage of the poor nor the mansion of the rich,” the editorial said. “In four short months, influenza claimed a half million lives and pressed millions of others onto beds of sickness, suffering and helplessness. The nation’s mortality rate leapt high and with astounding speed. The nation was unprepared to cope with a disease calamity such as it has never known.”The Gazette lamented that billions of dollars in loss were wrought by the pandemic of so-called Spanish influenza, compared with only $5 million being spent to investigate the virus. “More has been spent in studying diseases of hogs,” the editorial argued.Just less than a year earlier, The Evening Gazette did not see “darkness and terror” coming. A front page, above-the-fold story Sept. 25, 1918, asked: “Spanish Influenza just the old-fashioned grippe?” “Grippe” is an old-time term for the flu, by the way.“As a matter of fact, in the opinion of City Physician Beardsley, and a good many other Cedar Rapids men in the same profession, Spanish influenza is just another name for the regular old fashioned influenza and is no different from the influenza we have always had. A bad cold is a bad cold, and a worse cold is grippe, which covers a multitude of things ...,” The Gazette reported, optimistically. An earlier strain of influenza in the spring of 1918 had been less virulent and deadly. But the second wave was no ordinary grippe.By mid-October, according to reports in The Evening Gazette, influenza caseloads exploded. On Oct. 12, 1918, the local health board shut down pool rooms, billiard halls and bowling alleys. It pleaded with store owners to avoid allowing crowds to linger. On Oct. 16, stores were ordered to discontinue any special sales that might draw more shoppers. Restrictions tightened as the pandemic worsened. Death notices were stacking up on Gazette pages, in rows reminiscent of small tombstones. Many victims were cut down in the prime of life by a virus that struck young, healthy people hardest. Mothers and fathers died, leaving young children. Soldiers serving in World War I died far away from home. Visitors to town never returned home. Young brothers died and were mourned at a double funeral. A sister who came to care for a sick brother died, and so did her brother.Ray Franklin Minburn, 24, died of influenza, leaving behind six sisters and two brothers. “Mr. Minburn was a faithful son, a devoted companion, a good neighbor,” concluded his death announcement on Oct. 21, 1918. On the same page that day came news, tucked among the tombstones, reporting that Iowa Gov. William Harding had recovered from influenza, in the midst of his reelection campaign, and was back in the office. You might remember Harding as the governor who banned German and other languages during World War I and who was nearly impeached for bribery in 1919. Not far from Harding’s update came news from the prison in Anamosa that “whisky and quinine” were being deployed to attack the grippe. The pages of The Evening Gazette also were dotted with advertisements for supposed cures and treatments. “Danger of infection from influenza or any contagious disease can be eliminated by using preventive measures,” prescribed by Ruby S. Thompson, chiropractor and naturopathic physician. Those included “Sulphur-vapor baths, Carlsbad mineral bath.”You could build up your blood using “Gude’s Pepto-Mangan,” the “Red Blood Builder.” Keep your strength up with Horlick’s Malted Milk. One ad looked exactly like a news story, carrying the bold headline “Druggists still asked to conserve stocks of VapoRub needed in ‘flu’ districts.” In a tiny notation at the end of the “story” were the words “The Vicks Chemical Co.” That August 1919 Gazette editorial I mentioned makes me wonder what we’ll be writing in a year or so after our current pandemic. Death stalking us swiftly from seaboard to seaboard in an unprepared nation, preceded by the casual insistence it’s no worse than the seasonal flu, sounds eerily familiar in 2020. More attention is being paid to hogs than the health of humans working in meatpacking plants.Will we be writing in 2021 how reopening states and counties too soon led to our own second wave? Here in Iowa, reopening began before we had a fully working predictive model to chart the pandemic’s course and before new testing efforts had a chance to ramp up. Will decisions made without crucial information look smart in 2021? Or will we wish we’d waited just a couple more weeks?What of the protesters demanding liberation? What about the president, running for reelection in a nation harmed by his crisis mismanagement? What will a new normal look like? Will there be newspapers around to editorialize in the aftermath? After all, most of the pitches for fake cures are online now, some even extolled at White House briefings.And will we be better prepared next time? I bet editorial writers in 1919 figured we’d have this pandemic response thing down to a science by now.Little did they know that in 2020 we’d have so little respect for science. And after a century-plus, the darkness and terror apparently slipped our minds. (319) 398-8262; todd.dorman@thegazette.com Full Article Staff Columnist