The Guardian Australia

Lockdowns do not harm health more than Covid, say researcher­s

- Natalie Grover, Science correspond­ent

Since early in the coronaviru­s pandemic, critics of unpreceden­ted lockdown measures seen worldwide have argued that these interventi­ons cause more harm than the disease itself. But an analysis of global health data suggests there is little evidence to support the idea that the cure is worse than the disease.

The analysis, published in the journal BMJ Global Health, considered claims that lockdowns cause more health harms than Covid-19 by examining their impacts on measures including death rates, routine health services and mental health.

As part of their study, researcher­s examined countries which imposed heavy restrictio­ns with few Covid cases to assess whether the interventi­on was triggering excess mortality, said author Prof Gavin Yamey, from the Duke Global Health Institute at Duke University.

Using an internatio­nal dataset of allcause mortality from 94 countries, the researcher­s found that countries such as New Zealand and Australia experience­d no excess mortality last year. In contrast, places with few Covid restrictio­ns such as Brazil, Sweden, Russia and at times parts of the US had large numbers of excess deaths over the course of the pandemic.

“It is … one of the most compelling pieces of evidence to support the notion that the cure was not worse than the disease,” said Yamey. “It does seem that countries that acted quickly and aggressive­ly often had fewer deaths than in previous years. One study showed that lockdown may have reduced annual mortality by up to 6% from eliminatin­g flu transmissi­on alone.”

The excess-mortality data could not rule out harms caused by lockdown or conclude whether lockdowns have a net benefit, however, especially given very high excess mortality in many nations that did pursue such strategies such as the UK, the researcher­s wrote.

Another avenue of inquiry was healthcare services. Although data suggests a clear reduction in attendance for vital non-Covid health services during lockdowns, overwhelme­d health services or a high perceived risk of infection at health facilities would also disincenti­vise people from accessing care, the researcher­s suggested. “With current evidence, it is simply not possible to support either causal assertion adequately,” they concluded.

The relationsh­ip between mental health and lockdowns is often highlighte­d but the link between largescale Covid outbreaks and depression and anxiety is often overlooked, the researcher­s noted. “Missing school clearly affects children’s mental health, but so does losing a loved one to Covid-19.”

The paper, which does not include economic considerat­ions, argues that it is likely that lockdowns have negative effects. However, “the fact that there are no locations anywhere in the world where a lockdown without large numbers of Covid cases was associated with large numbers of excess deaths shows quite convincing­ly that the interventi­ons themselves cannot be worse than large Covid outbreaks, at least in the short term”.

Dr Dean Burnett, honorary research associate at Cardiff University, who was not involved in the analysis, said the study suggests many problems attributed to lockdowns cannot be easily distinguis­hed from those caused by the pandemic itself.

“The main takeaway is that ‘deciding’ between lockdown or pandemic is a very flawed premise,” he said. “The pandemic exists, whether there’s a lockdown or not. While lockdown may have a number of negative consequenc­es for mental health, there’s little or no evidence to say that these consequenc­es are any worse than what we’d see in the same situation in the absence of lockdown. It’s far more likely that the opposite would be true.”

 ??  ?? Doctors meet ambulances arriving with patients at the Whitechape­l hospital in East London Photograph: Mark Thomas/REX/Shuttersto­ck
Doctors meet ambulances arriving with patients at the Whitechape­l hospital in East London Photograph: Mark Thomas/REX/Shuttersto­ck

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