It is not the worst health emergency to face the world.

As politicians and expert scientific advisers queue up to fall over each other in upping their rhetoric and over-exaggerating their speculative claims & hyperbole, a little perspective is required. Simply looking at the bigger picture called ‘time’ and an observational period of more than a decade or so reveals the following genuine global emergencies:

1968 – Hong Kong flu, with an estimated death toll of 1 – 4 million.

1957 – Asian flu, with an estimated death toll of 1 – 2 million.

1918 – Spanish flu, with an estimated death toll of 25 – 50 million.

1910 – Sixth cholera pandemic, with an estimated death toll of 800,000.

1889 – Asiatic flu, with an estimated death toll of 1 million.

1852 – Third cholera pandemic, with an estimated death toll of 1 million.

1346 – Second bubonic plague, with an estimated death toll of 75 – 200 million.

541 – First bubonic plague, with an estimated death toll of 25 million.