Welcome, Guest: Register On Nairaland / LOGIN! / Trending / Recent / New
Stats: 3,194,721 members, 7,955,702 topics. Date: Sunday, 22 September 2024 at 01:22 PM

THROWBACK: How Influenza Killed 500,000 Out Of 18 Million Nigerians In 1918 - Health - Nairaland

Nairaland Forum / Nairaland / General / Health / THROWBACK: How Influenza Killed 500,000 Out Of 18 Million Nigerians In 1918 (411 Views)

Throwback Photo Of 1918 Spanish Flu Pandemic That Killed Over 50Million Globally / How Spanish Flu Killed 500,000 Nigerians 102 Years Ago / A Deadly Influenza Virus Is Spreading Across America, 15 Million People Infected (2) (3) (4)

(1) (Reply) (Go Down)

THROWBACK: How Influenza Killed 500,000 Out Of 18 Million Nigerians In 1918 by cyrilamx(m): 7:55am On Apr 08, 2020
THROWBACK: How influenza killed 500,000 out of 18 million Nigerians in 1918.

106 years after Nigeria is faced with another pandemic – Coronavirus

The Influenza Global Pandemic of 1918-1919.

Á ò rí’rú eléyì rí, a fií dé rù b’omo ni; unprecedented is just a word, there’s really nothing new under the sun!

In this season of Coronavirus pandemic, let us look back at some devastating epidemics that has affected us in the past.



The 1918 influenza pandemic was the most severe pandemic in recent history. It was caused by an H1N1 virus with genes of avian origin. Although there is no universal consensus regarding where the virus originated, it spread worldwide between 1918-1919.

It is estimated that about 500 million people or one-third of the world’s population became infected with this virus. The number of deaths was estimated to be at least 50 million worldwide according to the CDC.

About 500,000 Nigerians, out of a population of 18million, died in less than 6 months, and  between 50 and 80% of the population was stricken. The over-crowded urban centers (Yorubaland)  were the hardest hit and, even though the pandemic declined almost as suddenly as it began, morbidity, mortality, and panic adversely affected the productive capacity of the country.

The Influenza officially hit Lagos on 14 September 1918 (Public Record Office, London) The 1st case in Lagos was confirmed on 14 Sept. Three crew men of the SS Panayiotis were discovered by Dr Gray, a colonial medical officer, to be seriously ill and lying on the Iddo wharf.

The route

These three crew men were removed to the infectious disease hospital in Ikoyi after they were diagnosed with the disease. The ship was ‘arrested’ and disinfected by the sanitary authority & subsequently sent to the pool; a sort of quarantine area for disinfected ships.

Docked ships

The rate of the spread and infection in Lagos was rapid and devastating. By mid-September, all the merchant ships anchored in Lagos were infected. In fact one of these ships was credited to have caused the wide spread of the influenza in Lagos.

More precisely, SS Bida was said to have been “the chief means introducing the influenza to Nigeria” (Public Record Office, London, 1919).

The SS Bida had left the Gold Coast & arrived in Lagos on 14 Sept with 239 passengers. The inadequacy & complacency of Lagos sanitary control was exposed when all passengers had been let free without thorough examination, left to disappear & intermix with the local population.

Infected persons mixed freely with healthy ones

The complacency of the sanitary officer in charge of the sea port of Lagos was later confirmed by the Ag Governor in a memo to the British Secretary of State. More cases of infected passengers on the SS Bida were recorded than for any other ship anchored at Lagos at that time.

Memo written by then acting Governor

The following examples were some of those reported and linked to the ship:

*A first class customs clerk went to see a medical officer on 18th Sept; became very ill on the 22nd, was sent to the Infectious Diseases Hospital IDH (same hospital were the persons infected with coronavirus about 102 years later) on 23rd as a case of influenza; died the same day.

It was found that a woman was ill in the man’s house on the 15th and that she was a passenger from Secondee by the S.S. “Bida” she left by train on the house on the 23rd, and was removed to the IDH.

A krooman, from the S.S “Bida” was found in the street on the 23rd; he was partly unconscious, and his address in Lagos could not be obtained.

On the 24th, a Customs Clark, living in the same compound as another Government clerk and a girl, who are both natives of the Gold Coast. It was declared, though later denied, that they had been in contact with passenger from the S.S “Bida”.

The cook of a government official, on the 25th; he lived in a compound which passengers from S.S. “Bida” were said to have visited. Also a Customs Clark, who worked in the same office as case of 18th September, his sister and son on the 26th. There were many more such cases.

The colonial government struggled to control the infection. From 14 September when the infection was first confirmed in the city, cases of infection were reported every day from ships coming in from neighbouring colonies.

The rate of its spread and the rapidity at which it claimed its victims was unimaginable. The victims cut across the social stratum as members of all classes were infected by the influenza.

Within the first hours of the outbreak, the medical facilities of the colonial hospital and the infectious disease hospital were overstretched. Victims were lying on the street, while rescuers also became victims.

In the first 2 months of the outbreak enormity of the casualties was overwhelming. 2,806 natives and 116 European and non natives were infected. 243 natives eventually died, as well as 7 none natives in cases referred from Lagos port alone. Lagos lost 1.5% of it pop of 81,941.



The figure given by the colonial government nevertheless is grossly inaccurate as it did not include those who died in their homes and whose deaths were not reported to the sanitary officer. Also does not include minors whose deaths were not reported to the authorities.

The influenza was declared as an infectious disease through public notice. This legal recognition of the epidemic provided the colonial state with the mandate to intrude forcefully and sometimes aggressively into the private houses of people; this was unprecedented in Lagos.

These visits were objected to by some Lagosians; they believed that it would under- mine their privacy. It caused massive social & economic dislocation as the people began to run out of Lagos, further spreading it, while those who could not leave concealed their sickness.

To reverse the attitude of the people, the government offered to organise the whole of the house-to-house visits by natives, working in conjunction and under the direction of the sanitary authority.

On 7 October, a general meeting was convened in Lagos where Dr Foy, Senior Sanitary Officer, Dr Beringer and Dr Obassa, a native medical practitioner, addressed the people on the need to allow the house-to-house visits.



The support of Mr Kitoyi Ajasa was solicited by the government to use his newspaper to publicise the scheme; this is evident from studying The Nigerian Pioneer from 1918–1919.

To help spread the information influenza

Ships and houses were sprayed with sulphur fumigation and with solution of the cyllin disinfectant. The process was discontinued at one point by the medical and sanitary department chiefly because of shortage of the disinfectant and shortage of labour.

This scenario was reduced to a common joke among the people: Owo re, ikure, oyinbo pe e ko wa gba (here is money, here is death, the white man is calling you to come and take).

Since 1918, the world has experienced three additional pandemics, in 1957, 1968, 2009and most recently in 2019/2020. These subsequent pandemics were less severe and caused considerably lower mortality rates than the 1918 pandemic.

The 1957 H2N2 pandemic and the 1968 H3N2 pandemic each resulted in an estimated 1 million global deaths, while the 2009 H1N1 pandemic resulted in fewer than 0.3 million deaths in its first year. Still doubtful of the total deaths that COVID19 will eventually cause globally.

This perhaps begs the question of whether a high severity pandemic on the scale of 1918 could occur in modern times except coronavirus?

IMPORTANT POINT TO NOTE: During the 1918 pandemic, churches, mosques, markets were closed down by the colonial masters to stop the spread of influenza similar to the government has done in this century. There was a total lockdown.

Source: Managing Epidemic: The British Approach to 1918-1919 Influenza in Lagos. By Jimoh Mufutau Oluwasegun.

Re: THROWBACK: How Influenza Killed 500,000 Out Of 18 Million Nigerians In 1918 by chatinent: 8:04am On Apr 08, 2020
I guess you mean we should be threatened, but guess what? We aren't!
Re: THROWBACK: How Influenza Killed 500,000 Out Of 18 Million Nigerians In 1918 by SocialJustice: 8:27am On Apr 08, 2020
So we were just 18 million about 100 years ago?
Re: THROWBACK: How Influenza Killed 500,000 Out Of 18 Million Nigerians In 1918 by CodeTemplar: 8:33am On Apr 08, 2020
We multiply 10-fold in 100 years. that's 20m every 10 years. How possible is that?

(1) (Reply)

Chinese Doctors Scary, Nigerian Doctors Best / ₦5,000,000 To Be Infected With Covid19 / The Awaiting Cause Of Corona Virus In Nigeria Revealed

(Go Up)

Sections: politics (1) business autos (1) jobs (1) career education (1) romance computers phones travel sports fashion health
religion celebs tv-movies music-radio literature webmasters programming techmarket

Links: (1) (2) (3) (4) (5) (6) (7) (8) (9) (10)

Nairaland - Copyright © 2005 - 2024 Oluwaseun Osewa. All rights reserved. See How To Advertise. 21
Disclaimer: Every Nairaland member is solely responsible for anything that he/she posts or uploads on Nairaland.