Daily Mail

Why Britain must not be sacrificed on the altar of fighting Covid

From a Government adviser on pandemics...

- By Prof Robert Dingwall

BORIS JOHNSON, it emerged this week, has finally decided to disagree with sage, the committee of scientists that seems to have been running our response to the pandemic ever since it became clear we had an internatio­nal crisis on our hands.

They had recommende­d the return of a full national lockdown of the sort imposed in March, on a temporary basis to halt the spread of the virus.

such a step would have meant the wholesale suspension of the hospitalit­y trade, closure of outlets such as gyms and hairdresse­rs and a ban on any household mixing.

Their advocacy of this socalled ‘circuit-breaker’ shows how some members of the scientific community have lost their sense of proportion.

in essence, they want the entire wellbeing of the nation to be sacrificed on the altar of the fight against Covid. But it ignores the devastatin­g social and economic impact of Covid restrictio­ns, and exaggerate­s the threat the disease poses.

of course we must seek to save the lives of those seriously affected by the coronaviru­s, but we must not be so narrowmind­ed as to forget people suffering from other conditions and the catastroph­ic effect of our approach on the economy.

here are the key issues lockdown advocates must take on board . . . and on which there has been a deafening silence from some of our leaders.

DEATH RATES STILL REMARKABLY LOW

DespiTe all the hysteria, this is not a modern plague. in the week ending october 2, Covid accounted for just 3.2 per cent of all fatalities in British hospitals. even with the recent rise in infections, Covid mortality levels are drasticall­y lower now than at the peak of the pandemic in the spring.

on April 8, according to the office for national statistics, 975 people died with Covid, compared to 74 last Wednesday. similarly, in the week ending April 17, 8,758 fatalities were recorded that mentioned Covid-19 as a possible factor on the death certificat­e. For the first week in october, that figure was just 321.

That toll may increase, but it is highly unlikely to reach the levels we saw in spring.

DISEASE OF THE OLD AND VULNERABLE

CoviD-19 is a cruel disease that targets the old or those whose life expectancy is compromise­d by ill-health.

While every life is precious, the average age of patients who die with Covid-19 is 82.4. since August, just one otherwise healthy person under 30 has died with the disease, while in the same period only 97 victims have been younger than 60.

one study in June by the office for national statistics found 91 per cent of people who died with Covid in england and Wales between March and June had at least one preexistin­g condition. This is not to trivialise the virus. every life is valuable, but Covid- 19 deaths are no more or less important than any others.

BETTER OUTCOMES

As knoWleDge of Covid-19 has deepened, so survival rates have improved significan­tly. Drugs such as remdesivir and dexamethas­one are highly effective in treating the disease, while it is now recognised ventilator­s can sometimes do more harm than good.

For those admitted to intensive care with Covid, the chances of survival have gone up to 80 per cent. even for the very elderly, contractin­g it need not be a death sentence.

Contrary to the depressing propaganda, six in every seven people who are infected over the age of 90 actually survive.

GRIM WARNINGS GO UNREALISED

in Their controvers­ial press briefing on september 21, just before the imposition of new pub curfews and rules on mask-wearing, Chief Medical officer Chris Whitty and Chief scientific Adviser sir patrick vallance warned Britain could have 50,000 new daily infections by mid-october.

Though they stressed it was not ‘a prediction’ but ‘an illustrati­on’ of what could happen without action, they offered no alternativ­e scenario.

Yet we have reached midoctober and their grim warning has, thankfully, been unfulfille­d. over the past week, the rate of infections has averaged just 14,000.

LITTLE TO BACK PUB AND BAR CLOSURES

TArgeTing the hospitalit­y trade, the mix of curfews and closures has been central to the government’s anti-Covid strategy. But in truth there is little convincing scientific evidence to support the belief that these venues are significan­t arenas of transmissi­on.

This is confirmed by sage papers, released on Monday, which accepted the economic damage of closures outweighs any potential health benefits.

LOCKDOWNS DON’T WORK

MuCh of the north and the Midlands has been living with Covid restrictio­ns for months, yet it has not stemmed the rise in positive cases.

revealingl­y, Chris Whitty stated at Monday’s briefing that he did not think even the most extreme Tier 3 crackdown — now imposed in liverpool — would have much impact.

Much of the momentum behind the recent increase has been driven by the return of students to universiti­es without symptoms — only to be mass tested and told they are infected. But young people are those least in danger. There is not a single documented case of any student this autumn yet dying from Covid.

given these low risks, it might be counter-productive to curb infections among students since, by contractin­g the disease, they can boost immunity in their communitie­s.

HUNT FOR A VACCINE

YeArning for release from the cycle of Covid despair, the public has been encouraged by the government to pin its hopes on a vaccine.

But such faith may be misplaced. The task is not easy. in 40 years, scientists have never found an hiv/AiDs vaccine, nor has one been discovered for the sArs virus in 18 years.

second, a vaccine may not be a panacea. it will probably be more like an annual flu jab — which will give some protection but not stop you contractin­g the disease — rather than a measles vaccine, which provides a lifetime’s protection.

We shall probably have to learn to live with the virus, with nearly all of us infected at some point. last week a report by edinburgh university argued that heavy-handed use of lockdowns and social distancing could cost between 80,000 and 95,000 lives over the course of the pandemic — far more than have died from Covid — by preventing the establishm­ent of herd immunity.

ECONOMIC DISASTER

The economic damage caused by lockdowns, curfews and restrictio­ns is becoming ever more apparent.

We now face a winter of lengthenin­g dole queues, growing poverty, and mass business failures. entire sectors of commercial life face wipe-out, from cinemas to the travel industry.

even with rishi sunak’s eat out to help out scheme, August growth was sluggish.

only yesterday it was revealed redundanci­es in the three months to the end of August went up by 114,000, while people claiming out-ofwork benefits rose to 2.7 million, the highest figure since records began in 1995.

And the soaring public debt — with the government likely borrowing more than £350 billion this year — will have be paid by generation­s to come.

THE WIDER IMPACT

The wreckage to the economy will worsen physical and mental health. Depression, family breakdown and suicide look certain to rise.

Because of the relentless narrow focus by authoritie­s on Covid, other medical conditions are badly neglected.

oncologist­s warn there could be 50,000 premature deaths from cancer, due to deferred treatments and diagnostic screening failures. The same pattern is found with other health problems, made worse by a reluctance to attend hospital for fear of being a burden — or of contractin­g Covid.

it’s time for a wider range of ideas and voices to be heard.

The question we need to ask is: how can we make the transition to living with this virus, rather than being traumatise­d by a futile fight against it?

Robert Dingwall is professor of sociology at nottingham trent University and a member of groups advising the government on the pandemic. He is writing in a personal capacity.

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