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ARTICLE |

POSTINFLUENZAL PSYCHOSES

EGBERT W. FELL, M.D.
JAMA. 1919;72(23):1658-1661. doi:10.1001/jama.1919.02610230012002.
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During the recent epidemic approximately 2,500 cases of influenza were treated in the Walter Reed General Hospital. In 435 of these cases pneumonia either had already developed before admittance to the hospital or was diagnosed here during the course of the influenza. The number of deaths from pneumonia was 226, making the death rate 52 per cent. This includes practically all deaths from influenza and gives a mortality rate of about 9 per cent. for all influenza cases admitted.

Delirium occurring during the height of the disease and clearing with the cessation of fever (fever delirium) was more frequent in the early part of the epidemic when the more severe cases were seen. The features of this delirium were in no way peculiar to influenza, but were such as mark a hallucinatory confusion arising in the course of any infectious disease. Cases of this sort are not considered in this

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