Daily Mail

Truth about the claims scaring us all to death

Soaring infections. Teeming hospital wards. Terrifying death rates... some of the harrowing ‘facts’ to justify crippling new lockdowns. But now read the reality the experts DON’T want to tell you about

- By Ross Clark

WITH half of Britain set to be plunged into stricter lockdowns from midnight tonight, you could be forgiven for thinking that, amidst all the doom and gloom, the threat of Covid-19 has never been so severe.

But as ROSS CLARK reveals, things might not be anywhere near as bad as the fear-mongers would have you think…

CLAIM ICU beds in Liverpool are already 95 per cent full REALITY Fewer ICU beds are occupied than last year

On paper the 95 per cent statistic, revealed earlier this week by Liverpool city councillor Paul Brant, conjures up a disturbing image of overflowin­g hospitals and inadequate care.

So rest assured that it bears no relation to reality. Indeed yesterday, Liverpool University Hospitals NHS Foundation Trust dismissed Mr Brant’s claim, insisting that its units were only 80 per cent full with just 47 of its 61 critical care beds occupied.

That may still seem high, but it is actually perfectly normal for ICU beds to be full at this time of year.

Last year, for example, 51 out of 59 ICU beds in Liverpool’s hospitals were full, while in 2018 it was 52 out of 59 beds.

Meanwhile, if there is a surge in demand for intensive care beds for Covid- 19 patients, let’s not forget how quickly the NHS was able to repurpose general and acute care hospital beds during the first coronaviru­s spike.

In fact, only yesterday Liverpool’s Aintree University Hospital revealed that it has already fitted 40 beds with ventilator­s and a further 30 beds with specialist CPAP breathing equipment.

CLAIM: The Covid-19 death rate is actually high REALITY: It really isn’t

Such fears date all the way back to March, when the World Health Organisati­on morosely announced at a press conference that the virus had a mortality rate of 3.2 per cent.

But that figure was based on a crude calculatio­n that divides the number of deaths by the number of confirmed cases of infection.

As we know from antibody tests, which show that many people have had Covid-19 without knowing it and without being tested, most cases have actually gone unrecorded.

To accurately work out the death rate, we must focus on something called the Infection Fatality Rate (IFR) – which is the number of deaths divided by the number of actual cases.

Scientists at Imperial College London originally estimated the IFR for Covid at 0.9 per cent, and an updated estimate has put it at 0.66 per cent.

And many even believe the figure to be far lower.

One paper published in the Bulletin of the World Health Organisati­on this week by John Ioannidis, a Professor of Medicine at Stanford University, reviewed 61 studies from around the world that have calculated the IFR.

His analysis shows that their median – the middle figure – value for the IFR is 0.27 – suggesting that only four in every thousand people who have been infected with Covid19 have died from it.

CLAIM: A second spike could cause twice as many deaths REALITY: Far fewer people are dying now

This disturbing claim dates back to a report from July by the Academy of Medical Scientists – and commission­ed by Chief Scientific Adviser Sir Patrick Vallance – which estimated there could be 119,000 deaths if a second spike coincided with a peak of winter flu.

Yet to reach that figure, the socalled ‘second wave’ would have to get significan­tly worse than it currently is.

Yesterday, only 138 people died who had tested positive for Covid19 in the past 28 days. In comparison, at the height of the epidemic in the spring there were more than 1,000 deaths a day.

Such an improvemen­t is hardly surprising given that treatments have improved and that many of the most vulnerable people will – sadly – have already died in the first peak.

CLAIM: The current wave of infection will tear through the elderly

REALITY: We are far better prepared this time around

In response to the signing of the Great Barrington Declaratio­n by more than 3,000 scientists last week – which called on government­s to abandon one-size-fits-all lockdowns in favour of targeted shielding – Professor Stephen Powis, national medical director of NHS England, described the claim that ‘the elderly can somehow just be fenced off from risk’ as ‘wishful thinking’.

Of course, the elderly are considerab­ly more vulnerable to Covid-19. Indeed, the average age of a coronaviru­s victim, according to analysis by the Oxford Centre for Evidence-Based Medicine, is 82.4 years.

But does this really warrant widespread panic? After all, it is significan­tly higher than the average age reached by people recorded as dying from all other causes, which is 81.5.

And don’t forget that a large portion of deaths among the elderly patients in the spring occurred because they were discharged from hospitals to care homes without being tested, and also because care home staff – many of whom didn’t have adequate protective equipment – were working across several care homes.

But now, elderly patients are routinely tested before being discharged to care homes, and the Department of Health’s winter plan has banned staff from working in more than one care home setting, which should help stop the spread of Covid-19 from home to home.

CLAIM Hospitals are less prepared than this time in March REALITY Doctors are far better equipped to fight the virus

An unnamed doctor at the Royal Liverpool Hospital was quoted yesterday as saying that ‘before the first peak, elective surgery was curtailed so the hospital was pretty empty, staff were redeployed. [But] this time, there was no real curtailmen­t of any elective work.’

Yet before we start jumping to

any apocalypti­c conclusion­s about the readiness of our hospitals, it’s worth rememberin­g that this is just one view of one doctor in one hospital.

Contrary to his panicked statement, it’s undeniably the case that intensive care doctors have learned a huge amount about how to treat Covid-19 over the past few months, such as when and when not to put patients on ventilator­s.

CLAIM There’s no such thing as immunity REALITY The chances of reinfectio­n are low

Earlier this week, it was revealed that a 25-year-old man in the US caught Covid for the second time, leading the University of Nevada’s Dr Mark Pandori to warn that there could be ‘significan­t implicatio­ns for our understand­ing of Covid-19 immunity’.

But it’s worth noting that researcher­s in Nevada have admitted that they are not entirely sure that the patient was actually reinfected.

Instead, they say, there’s a chance that the virus from his first infection had lain dormant and become reactivate­d inside his body.

More importantl­y, if being infected with Covid-19 did not give us immunity, at least for the short term, we would know it by now.

After all, there must be a reason why hundreds of thousands of people who have suffered from Covid19 are not suffering second and third bouts of the disease.

CLAIM We will never get to herd immunity REALITY We shouldn’t rule it out

Speaking to the House of Commons earlier this week, Health Secretary Matt Hancock made the prepostero­us claim that ‘ herd immunity is a flawed goal without a vaccine, even if we could get to it, which we can’t’.

He backed this up by suggesting that a number of infectious diseases such as measles ‘never reach herd immunity’.

Since then, Mr Hancock has been corrected by Harvard University’s Dr Martin Kulldorff and Stanford’s Dr Jay Bhattachar­ya – who have pointed out that in the days before a vaccine, outbreaks of measles did end before everyone got infected, due to herd immunity.

Meanwhile, although the Government’s scientific advisers have claimed herd immunity could be reached if around 60 percent of us have been infected, other scientists believe the figure to be much lower.

According to modelling by Gabriella Gomes of the Liverpool School of Tropical Medicine, we could gain herd immunity when just 10 to 20 per cent of us have had the disease.

CLAIM By locking down more quickly, the Scottish and Welsh government­s have handled the pandemic better

REALITY The results have been the same

Certainly, Scottish First Minister Nicola Sturgeon and her Welsh counterpar­t Mark Drakeford have seized every opportunit­y to attack the Westminste­r Government and remind us that they are doing things better.

But while England was briefly recording significan­tly more cases and deaths than Scotland and Wales in the summer, that’s no longer the case.

In fact, recent analysis of the figures shows that there’s little to separate the three countries.

Over the past seven days, England has had on average 230 new infections per million inhabitant­s, while Scotland has 205 and Wales 213.

CLAIM C ‘Long Covid’ may leave millions suffering from symptoms for years

REALITY Serious cases are very uncommon

According to a report published by the National Institute for Health Research yesterday, there could be ‘ s significan­t psychologi­cal and so social impacts’ on people living with long-term Covid-19, where their recovery is drawn out.

But while the phrase ‘long Covid’ may have a terrifying ring to it, it’s essential to note that delayed recovery is not uncommon with viral illnesses.

Meanwhile, don’t be fooled into thinking that such a prolonged reaction to Covid-19 is common. In fact, many people infected with Covid-19 – up to 80 per cent according to some studies – don’t suffer any symptoms in the first place.

CLAIM Only a ‘circuit breaker’ will stop virus REALITY It will only delay the inevitable

On Wednesday, Claudia Paoloni, president of The Hospital Consultant­s and Specialist­s Associatio­n, grimly warned that ‘we find ourselves in an inimitable situation in that [ locking down the entire country for two weeks will] buy ourselves some time’ and suppress the virus.

Moreover, Matt Keeling, a mathematic­ian at the University of Warwick, recently estimated that a two-week circuit breaker could save 8,000 lives.

Yet even Sage, the Government’s Scientific Advisory Group for Emergencie­s which called for a temporary circuit breaker lockdown three weeks ago, admits that doing so would only delay the epidemic by 28 days.

In other words, if we locked down tomorrow, by the end of October we would merely be back with the infection rate we had at the beginning of the month. ■ The Denial by Ross Clark is published by Lume Books

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 ??  ?? Sir Patrick Vallance, the chief scientific adviser, last month issued a set of figures with cases doubling every seven days, meaning the country would see 50,000 cases a day by the middle of October. In reality cases are doubling every 12 days, and Britain has a rolling seven-day average of 15,655 cases a day.
Sir Patrick Vallance, the chief scientific adviser, last month issued a set of figures with cases doubling every seven days, meaning the country would see 50,000 cases a day by the middle of October. In reality cases are doubling every 12 days, and Britain has a rolling seven-day average of 15,655 cases a day.
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