Artículo de revista
Global Mortality Impact of the 1957–1959 Influenza Pandemic
Fecha
2016Registro en:
The Journal of Infectious Diseases 2016:213 (1 March)
0022-1899
DOI: 10.1093/infdis/jiv534
Autor
Viboud, Cécile
Simonsen, Lone
Fuentes, Rodrigo
Flores, José
Miller, Mark
Chowell, Gerardo
Institución
Resumen
Background. Quantitative estimates of the global burden of the 1957 influenza pandemic are lacking. Here we fill this gap by
modeling historical mortality statistics.
Methods. We used annual rates of age- and cause-specific deaths to estimate pandemic-related mortality in excess of background
levels in 39 countries in Europe, the Asia-Pacific region, and the Americas. We modeled the relationship between excess mortality
and development indicators to extrapolate the global burden of the pandemic.
Results. The pandemic-associated excess respiratory mortality rate was 1.9/10 000 population (95% confidence interval [CI],
1.2–2.6 cases/10 000 population) on average during 1957–1959. Excess mortality rates varied 70-fold across countries; Europe
and Latin America experienced the lowest and highest rates, respectively. Excess mortality was delayed by 1–2 years in 18 countries
(46%). Increases in the mortality rate relative to baseline were greatest in school-aged children and young adults, with no evidence
that elderly population was spared from excess mortality. Development indicators were moderate predictors of excess mortality, explaining
35%–77% of the variance. Overall, we attribute 1.1 million excess deaths (95% CI, .7 million–1.5 million excess deaths)
globally to the 1957–1959 pandemic.
Conclusions. The global mortality rate of the 1957–1959 influenza pandemic was moderate relative to that of the 1918 pandemic
but was approximately 10-fold greater than that of the 2009 pandemic. The impact of the pandemic on mortality was delayed in
several countries, pointing to a window of opportunity for vaccination in a future pandemic.