Jackson, SC. The patient was admitted to the base hospital on September 20, 1918, diagnose with influenza and pneumonia. Patient zero had bluish discoloration of skin known as cyanosis and died on September 26, 1918. During the autopsy, doctors determine that patient zero had a fatal secondary lobar bacterial pneumonia in his left lung; however, the right lung showed only focal acute bronchiolitis and in-flammation, suggesting of influenza pneumonia . In 1918, the Spanish Influenza targeted young adults in urban areas in South African, among those are the ages of 20 and 40 accounted for 60 percent of the deaths in South Africa . Infected patients seek help from their doctors pleading for help. In turn, doctors had no cure or ways to subdue the patients’ symptoms; thus, it resulted in getting the doctor themselves falling ill to the influenza. At time, the infected patients felt in-flamed and burned with thirst. This resulted the plague victims to plunged themselves in cold water, or throwing themselves in rain tanks to ease the burning sensation