The Scottish Mail on Sunday

The biggest threat now is a world where politician­s and scientists insist eradicatin­g disease trumps human freedom

We’re witnessing the rise of the biosecurit­y state, says PROFESSOR ROBERT DINGWALL. And if we don’t resist, we’ll be living with face masks – and fear – for years to come...

-

THESE are extraordin­ary times, and not just because we are coming through the greatest national trauma since the Second World War. The vaccinatio­n programme is something close to a modern miracle. There is further good news in the startling success of the treatments we are pioneering for coronaviru­s patients. The UK is leading the world in these areas.

Yet, as the past week has shown, the nation is facing another threat – one which is both unpreceden­ted and deeply troubling.

We are witnessing the birth of what you might call the ‘biosecurit­y state’, a new world in which politician­s and the scientists who advise them decide that suppressin­g disease is more important than the human freedoms we take for granted.

We have made huge progress in fighting Covid-19, with a 90 per cent drop in the rates of hospitalis­ation and death. The crisis, if not completely over, is by any reasonable measure now close to its end.

Why, then, has the Government voted through laws allowing it to impose draconian restrictio­ns for another six months?

There is talk of vaccine passports simply to visit a pub or watch a play. Foreign holidays seem to be on indefinite hold.

Many Government advisers are determined to keep us in restrictio­ns beyond June 21 – the promised end of lockdown. If they have their way, this will not be the great day of release but a ‘new normal’ in which medical scientists stay close to the heart of power and shape the way we live, as the lives we once enjoyed fade to a distant memory.

I am not exaggerati­ng.

When Chief Scientific Adviser Sir Patrick Vallance and Chief Medical Officer Professor Chris Whitty addressed the House of Commons Science and Technology Committee, they described a future in which we will be indefinite­ly constraine­d by the need – as they see it – to keep infections to the lowest possible level.

In their view, vaccinatio­n does not mean liberation. It is merely an addition to social distancing, face covering, hand hygiene, Perspex screens and aggressive test and trace.

As Sir Patrick told the MPs: ‘The more we can make a routine around hygiene matters, ventilatio­n and so on, the better it is.’

Better for whom? Who gets to decide?

Sir Patrick envisages that scientists will advise government­s when to ‘release’ citizens from restrictio­ns, regardless of the vaccine success. The citizens don’t get a say.

WHAT, then, are the supposed justificat­ions for preventing us enjoying our ‘old’ freedoms? Foremost is the colourful claim that letting the virus circulate risks new mutations. It is increasing­ly clear, however, that even the current Covid variants of concern – from Brazil and South Africa, for example – are unlikely to defeat the vaccines, despite the many and repeated claims by mathematic­al modellers (who are not, I should point out, experts in genetics).

We would be better listening to California’s world-leading La Jolla Institute for Immunology, which recently concluded that new variants seem less dangerous than previously feared. Or Andrew Pollard, who led the clinical trials for the Oxford-AstraZenec­a vaccine and told Radio 4 that it’s time ‘to start moving away from an obsession with each variant as it appears’.

The vaccines can easily be tweaked to match new strains. Moreover – as La Jolla points out – these mutations do not seem to have an impact on T-cells, part of our immune system which, although they act more slowly than antibodies, make the biggest contributi­on to reducing the severity of an infection. Second-generation vaccines now close to introducti­on will be even harder to ‘escape’.

Then there is the claim is that even more people will die of Covid-19 unless we continue to control the population with intrusive precaution­s. What about, for example, those who refuse to take the jab or for whom it fails?

It is true that no vaccine is 100 per cent effective, but this is likely to be a fairly small group of people – probably fewer than those who have an influenza jab yet fail to develop an effective response.

Some will refuse to be vaccinated. They must accept responsibi­lity for their choice but, remem

ber, they are no threat to the rest of us. We are protected by our own decision to accept the vaccine.

There are groups who have not yet been persuaded to accept the jabs. This is a challenge to the health service and local government to be more imaginativ­e and culturally sensitive in delivering the rollout.

And some people will have existing conditions that weaken their immune systems, but they would always have been advised to avoid infection from any virus or bacteria.

Yes, there will be some level of risk involved after June 21, but risk is part of life. And context is all.

Take, for example, this comparison. There were just over 608,000 deaths in the UK in Covid-ravaged 2020. But if we adjust for the increasing size of the population, this is about ten per 1,000, the same level we had in the years around 2000 before we started annual flu vaccinatio­n. But there was no social distancing when we celebrated the Millennium, no face masks and no school closures.

As I have said in these pages before, a vaccinated population should treat Covid-19 in the same way as it treats influenza.

In a bad year for flu, we can lose 20,000-25,000 people. With a largely vaccinated population, there are likely to be about 30,000 Covid-related deaths over the next 12 months, an average of about 80 deaths every day. This is about half of one per cent of the deaths we would normally expect to happen in that period.

And not all of these will be additional deaths. In many cases, Covid will just substitute for another respirator­y infection.

Dr Susan Hopkins, an epidemiolo­gist consultant in infectious diseases and microbiolo­gy from Public Health England, has pointed to the possibilit­y we will suffer a bad flu season in 2021/22 because the level of population immunity has been pushed down by Covid restrictio­ns in 2020/21.

We might, then, talk about the dangers posed by normalisin­g face masks and the other Covid restrictio­ns – dangers which go beyond the dreadful toll on employment, mental health and life expectancy.

Humans seem to need some measure of exposure to infection to keep their immune systems in good shape. This winter’s challenge to the NHS may well come from flu rather than Covid.

Since 2010, death rates have been falling gradually, a testament to our health and social care services. Unfortunat­ely, this also means that our elderly population has become more frail.

While no one wants unnecessar­y deaths, humans are not immortal. We could not expect the decline in death rates to go on for ever. Covid-19 is extremely dangerous for some and it has killed too many people, but we need perspectiv­e, not panic, when thinking of our future.

The American Centers for Disease Control – known for its cautious approach – has recently told fully vaccinated Americans that they can start to lead normal lives. Denmark seems likely to lift lockdown by the end of May.

We, too, should be allowed to take the same risk we do every year with other respirator­y diseases.

It is time for the Prime Minister and his advisers to level with the public and admit that some risk of sickness and death is the price we pay for leading normal lives. This is a view that Prof Whitty appeared to endorse only last week when he pointed out that we have long accepted a certain risk of infection and death from flu.

But why did he also say we should wait up to two years before normal life resumes – as if we are we setting a higher benchmark for Covid-19?

Or have those in power now privately concluded that the ‘new normal’ means permanentl­y sacrificin­g

Yes, there will be a level of risk involved after June 21, but risk is part of life

We need perspectiv­e, not panic, when thinking of our future

our liberties in order to control disease, something that has never been a proper role of government? Will we be compelled to wear face masks in the winter months, but this time to guard against flu?

We must resist such calls. Democracie­s no longer die at the hands of men with guns but from within – at the hands of their elected leaders.

The risk of death from Covid-19 was already small for most people and will have been reduced by a further 98 per cent when Phase 1 of the vaccinatio­n programme is completed by early May (and all those aged over 50 have been offered full protection).

That is why June 21 should see a complete end to restrictio­ns, not the limp substitute of a partial lifting.

There will be no need for test and trace, a dead-weight cost to the NHS.

Nor should we worry about quarantine for travellers and banning summer holidays abroad. Variants are as likely to crop up in Blackburn as in Benidorm, and are – if anything – less likely to defeat the vaccinatio­n programme than mutations of influenza.

A newly vaccinated population should be free to throw its face masks on the bonfire. We should be free to hug one another and cheer our teams in a summer of European football. We should be free to embrace the miracle of our vaccine programme – and, at long last,

live without fear.

 ??  ?? l Robert Dingwall is a professor of sociology at Nottingham Trent University and a member of several Government advisory groups. He is writing here in a personal capacity.
l Robert Dingwall is a professor of sociology at Nottingham Trent University and a member of several Government advisory groups. He is writing here in a personal capacity.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United Kingdom