Categories
Arconati Dad family health history swine flu

Dad Ruminates on the Swine Flu

My dad sent me the following and I thought it useful to share.

The current buzz over swine flu reminds me…

The Year 1976, HEADLINE: President Gerald Ford Orders Nationwide Vaccination Program to Prevent Swine Flu Epidemic!

President Ford was acting on the advice of medical experts, who believed they were dealing with a virus potentially as deadly as the one that caused the 1918 Spanish influenza pandemic.

The virus surfaced in February, 1976, at Fort Dix, New Jersey, where 19-year-old Pvt. David Lewis told his drill instructor that he felt tired and weak, although not sick enough to skip a training hike. Lewis was dead within 24 hours.

The autopsy revealed that Lewis had been killed by “swine flu,” an influenza virus originating in pigs. By then several other soldiers had been hospitalized with symptoms. Government doctors became alarmed when they discovered that at least 500 soldiers on the base were infected without becoming ill.

It recalled 1918, when infected soldiers returning from the trenches of World War I triggered a contagion that spread quickly around the world, killing at least 20 million people. Fearing another plague, US health officials urged Ford to authorize a mass inoculation program aimed at reaching every man, woman and child. He did, to the tune of $135 million (over $500 million in today’s money).

Mass vaccinations started in October. In churches, temples, union-halls, and schools, hundreds lined up for a shot of “swine flu vaccine.” I remember it was a beautiful fall day (Jimmy was about 8-months old) and I was in the cafeteria of St. Christopher Church getting my flu shot from a white-gowned ‘nurse’ who wielded a special vaccination device that shot the fluid at high-pressure directly under the skin – the pressure was so high that no needle was required. The actual shot took only seconds, and was accompanied by very little of the expected bureaucratic paperwork.

Whether it was a bad batch of the vaccine, wrong dose, an allergic reaction, or just side-effect from the vaccine, I’ll never know. Both Jimmy’s mother and I began to feel queasy within 20-minutes. Before I got home, I had to stop the car to throw-up. And the severe flu symptoms continued for both of us for nearly a week. My mother (who got her shot at a different time) came over to take care young Jim, and also wound up taking care of both of his parents.

There were other problems with the program.  Within weeks reports started coming in of people developing Guillain-Barré syndrome, a paralyzing nerve disease, right after taking the shot. Within two months, 500 people were affected, and more than 30 died. Amid a rising uproar and growing public reluctance to risk the shot, federal officials abruptly canceled the program Dec. 16.

In the end, 40 million Americans were inoculated, and there was no epidemic. More technically advanced examination of the virus revealed later that it was nowhere near as deadly as the 1918 influenza virus.

The only recorded fatality from 1976 swine flu itself was the unfortunate Pvt. Lewis.

History’s verdict of the program is mixed. Critics assailed Ford, accusing him of grandstanding during an election year — it did him no good, because he lost anyway — while kowtowing to the pharmaceutical companies. Supporters laud the ability of the nation’s health bureaucracy to mobilize so effectively.  (It still amazes me that they were actually able to immunize 40 million (!) people in a very short period of time. …amazing also that we all did it with very little panic or controversy… Similar circumstances today would see 20-million lawyers filing maybe 160-million lawsuits!)

I am guessing that whatever today’s flu is, it has mutated enough that I probably have no immunity resulting from my 1976 inoculation. In any case, I hope there is no need to go through that again!

Credit: Historical details courtesy of wired.com; personal recollections are my own.

Here’s just one of several public service announcements that were broadcast in 1976 regarding the possible impending epidemic.

Categories
Arconati birthdays family Jim

Happy Birthday James A. Arconati!

Thanks everybody!

Categories
anniversary Arconati family

Happy Tenth Anniversary to Jim and Lisa Arconati

We celebrated our 10th Wedding Anniversary this weekend! The whole afternoon and evening was arranged by me for Lisa as a surprise. First, there was a family trip with the girls to see Seussical the Musical at the FCC Theatre within the James J. Eagan Center.

“Oh, the thinks you can think” when Dr. Seuss’ best loved stories collide and cavort in this unforgettable musical caper! The Cat in the Hat is the host and emcee in this romp through the Seuss classics! Will the planet of Who survive? Will Horton pay attention to Gertrude? Will Mayzie ever return for her egg? Dr. Seuss’ beloved classic characters find themselves intertwined in an incredible crazy-quilt adventure, in which the power of imagination and the most miraculous “think” ever save the day!

Then the girls went to Mema’s house while we went to a jewelry store to get a special locket soldered shut. Unfortunately, this particular store couldn’t get the work done without damaging the contents, so we bought a new chain for the locket and headed back out again.

We drove around Creve Coeur Park for a short time and checked in briefly to our hotel room at Harrah’s.

For dinner we spent a while dining on the finest fondue at The Melting Pot. By the time we had eaten our fill, it was time to return to the hotel for the night. The room was a junior suite on the 9th floor and had a huge tub. There was also had a huge bed with a faux-canopy, a comfy couch, a desk, two chairs and a big television. There were matching bath robes, a huge mirror and a double sink.

002 - Anniversary - Melting Pot

What a great time!

Categories
Arconati christmas events family

Merry Christmas Arconati Family!

It’s the time of year to wish you a Merry Christmas.

             /\
/o \
/ o \
/- o -\
/ o\
/ o \
/o \
/- o o-\
/ o o \
/ o o \
/- o -\
/ o o \
/o o \
/ o \
/---o--| |----o-\
__| |__

For me personally, I’m hoping that the reason for the season finds a home in your heart this year. Merry Christmas to all of our many friends and family!

                   .****,
                  * .--. *_
                  \/   `\| `\
               _.` |^.^ ?;` .'
             .;-.-'\_-'/-.',(
            /_.'          ;.|
          .;'          .-' .;
         /;           / `.' /
        .'(        _.'`.' /`
       /`,'`'"".`"` '.' .'
       \__.` '. _`;.' .'
        | `""-'` |  .'
        \;_....._/-'
Categories
Arconati birthdays family Mom

Happy Birthday Lois C. Arconati

Happy Birthday mom!

Categories
Arconati birthdays events family friends Joc photos

Happy Birthday Olivia N. Arconati

Happy Birthday to Olivia! We had a fun party at the local civic center indoor pool. The kids had a great time.

Here are some images with Olivia’s name on them from over the last year or so.

Categories
Arconati birthdays Dad family photos

Happy Birthday James E. Arconati!

Jim & Jimmy at Creve Coeur Lake - circa 1978
Jim & Jimmy at Creve Coeur Lake – circa 1978
DCP_1434.JPG - Poppi & Olivia (Sepia Edit)
Poppi & Olivia in California – 2005

We celebrated Dad’s 61st birthday at Dave & Busters and had a great time!

Categories
Arconati birthdays family Jon

Welcome to The Jon Arconati for President WebSite

As a Happy Birthday gift, I wanted to post a video of the latest and greatest news I’ve heard all day.

To view this content you need Macromedia’s Flash player working correctly. Please download at your convenience.

It is kind of a scary idea.

Categories
Arconati birthdays family Jon

Happy Birthday Jonathan L. Arconati

DCP_0650.JPG - Float Trip with Jon and Kelly

Categories
anniversary Arconati awards birthdays events graduations news obituary

Welcome! Welcome Back!

Hello family members and welcome to my website –or welcome back if you’ve been here before. My name is Jim Arconati, son of James E. Arconati. If you’re here right now and your last name is ALSO Arconati, you probably were at the reunion this weekend. Well, I’ve been busy with this website for a while. But now I’d like to offer any of the benefits that I’ve been enjoying all this time to you. These include but are not limited to:

  • Email addresses that end in @arconati.us, @arconati.net and @arconati.name… For example, your.first.name@arconati.us
  • A place to announce family news (like right here)…
  • Links to family-owned businesses and other websites… such as HappyIsTheBride.com, ColorburstVideo.com and any blog or myspace page I can find.
  • And Blogs! I have a personal blog, as well as sites about music, quotes, kids and jokes (sometimes rated R).
  • My résumé..
  • Lots of other good stuff that I find interesting or important… I gather it all here and connect it from one place.

So if you are interested in having your own email address with your last name OR you’d like to have a blog address with your name on it OR you’d like to post your résumé OR you’d like a link to your existing blog / business website / MySpace page etc. OR you’d like something else entirely different but possible on these sites, please don’t hesitate to ask.

I’m also asking for your help. If you have anything you’d like to contribute, I’d be really excited to talk to you about it. Don’t worry, I’m not looking for MONEY contributions, but CONTENT contributions. I’m looking for news, birthdays, graduations, anniversaries, events, congratulations, awards, obituaries and anything ELSE for the family that you want to post about. You could also write about anything not family-related that you are passionate about. These sites should not just be for me, but for the whole family. Thanks again for your time.

Sincerely,
James A. Arconati