No, I think it points to the unique nature of this pandemic. The 1918 influenza killed people. It killed millions between the ages of 20-50...perfectly healthy people for the time, people that were going to live 30-50 more years, people who never went to the doctor and people who did not have co-morbid conditions. Secondary infections may have done in a 20 year old but the influenza virus destroyed the lungs. What we saw in China and now Italy is people with low heart function and compromised respiratory systems were being kept alive by a bevy of modern medicine and treatments. Covid-19 pushes these people over the line. Only 12% of the deaths In Italy didn't accompany a co-morbid condition, and only 25% in China...the spanish flu would have had the numbers flipped...so it isn't just semantics.