Collection: Centenary of the 1918 influenza pandemic
Published in Microbiology
2018 marks the 100th anniversary of the 1918 influenza pandemic, which claimed ~50 million lives. The introduction of influenza viruses and subsequent adaptation to humans, which enabled human-to-human transmission, continues to pose a constant threat of a future pandemic. Despite the efforts to develop antiviral drugs and vaccines, improved surveillance and prevention strategies, influenza viruses continue to circulate in human populations and cause seasonal influenza epidemics around the world each year. In light of the rapid evolution of the virus, globalization, the growing human population and the magnitude of intercontinental travel, outbreaks on the scale of the 1918 influenza pandemic would even today have a devastating effect. This collection includes Reviews, Research and News and Comment articles from Nature, Nature Communications, Nature Ecology & Evolution, Nature Immunology, Nature Medicine, Nature Microbiology, Nature Reviews Drug Discovery, Nature Reviews Immunology and Nature Reviews Microbiology to showcase the latest advances in our understanding of influenza virus biology, evolution and adaptation, and advances in surveillance and drug and vaccine development.
Access the collection and an accompanying Comment article online.
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Nature Reviews Microbiology
This journal publishes the highest-quality reviews and perspectives highlighting important developments in our understanding of bacteria, archaea, viruses, fungi and protozoa, their environmental interactions, how they are harnessed in human endeavour and their societal impact.
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