John Barry

Adjunct faculty

  • New Orleans LA UNITED STATES
  • School of Public Health and Tropical Medicine
jbarry@tulane.edu

John Barry can speak to the coronavirus and how it compares to seasonal and pandemic viruses seen in past years.

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Biography

John Barry, author of The Great Influenza: The Story of the Deadliest Pandemic in History, can speak to the coronavirus and how it compares to seasonal and pandemic viruses seen in past years. His research focuses on how viruses spread, what causes them to become pandemics and what can be done to control deadly infections.

Barry is an American author and historian who has written books on the Great Mississippi Flood of 1927, the influenza pandemic of 1918, and the development of the modern form of the ideas of separation of church and state and individual liberty. He is a Distinguished Scholar and adjunct faculty at Tulane University.

Areas of Expertise

Coronavirus
Author
Historian
Pandemic Influenza
Policy Making
COVID-19

Education

Brown University

B.A.

Media Appearances

Coronavirus Crisis: Why self-isolation and social distancing failed for Spanish Flu

Express.co.uk  online

2020-03-25

The majority of deaths happened to young people, according to John M Barry, author of ‘The Great Influenza: The Epic Story of the Deadliest Plague in History’ He told Express.co.uk: “The peak age for death was 28 and the elderly escaped almost entirely. Well over 90 percent of excess mortality was people under 65.

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Lessons from 1918

WHYY PBS NPR  online

2020-03-25

Our guests are John Barry, professor of public health at Tulane University and author of The Great Influenza, and University of Pennsylvania nursing historian, Pat D'Antonio. But first, we’re going to hear about President Trump’s shift in coronavirus messaging in recent days when we speak to the Washington Post’s Philip Bump.

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U.S.-China media war on truth and trust

Japan Times  online

2020-03-23

John Barry, a professor at the Tulane University School of Public Health and Tropical Medicine, writes that the most important lesson from the 1918 Spanish flu outbreak that killed millions of people is “tell the truth. Without it, trust in authority disintegrates, society began fraying. …” Japan’s special strength is its social resilience but even that has limits. A crisis is not the time to discover that the reservoir of trust and goodwill has dried up.

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