Basics
Influenza is a disease of the respiratory tract caused by infection with influenza viruses. These viruses cause damage to the mucous membrane of the respiratory tract, allowing viral toxins (poisons) or various bacteria to enter the body.
Influenza is a highly contagious disease and often occurs during the flu season (winter in the northern hemisphere). Due to the high infectiousness, so-called influenza epidemics occur sporadically (above-average number of influenza cases in a defined area in a certain period of time).
According to the German Robert Koch Institute, about five to twenty percent of the population become infected with the influenza virus during the winter flu wave every year. However, the extent of the flu waves varies greatly from year to year.
Since the Spanish flu in 1918/19, which claimed more than 20 million lives, flu pandemics (spread of an infectious disease across countries and continents) have occurred approximately every ten to fifteen years.
In the autumn of 1997 and again in 2004, an outbreak of avian influenza occurred in Asia, resulting in the transmission of the H5N1 influenza virus from birds to humans. However, a mass slaughter of poultry has so far prevented a pandemic. Nevertheless, according to experts, there is a danger that the virus could change in such a way that it could be transmitted directly from person to person. This change would greatly increase the risk of a pandemic.
The first outbreak of swine flu occurred in April 2009. This was triggered by the influenza virus A/H1N1. The great danger is that the H1N1 virus has already changed to such an extent that it no longer passes from pigs to humans, but is transmitted directly from person to person.