Houston Chronicle

Study: Shutdowns prevented 60 million infections in U.S.

Report suggests that extreme restrictio­ns halted virus’ spread

- By Joel Achenbach and Laura Meckler

Shutdown orders prevented about 60 million novel coronaviru­s infections in the United States and 285 million in China, according to a research study published Monday that examined how stayat-home orders and other restrictio­ns limited the spread of the contagion.

A separate study from epidemiolo­gists at Imperial College London estimated the shutdowns saved about 3.1 million lives in 11 European countries, including 500,000 in the United Kingdom, and dropped infection rates by an average of 82 percent, sufficient to drive the contagion well below epidemic levels.

The two reports, published simultaneo­usly Monday in the journal Nature, used different methods to reach similar conclusion­s. They suggest that the aggressive and unpreceden­ted shutdowns, which caused massive economic disruption­s and job losses, were effective at halting the exponentia­l spread of the novel coronaviru­s.

“Without these policies employed, we would have lived through a very different April and May,” said Solomon Hsiang, director of the Global Policy Laboratory at the University of California at Berkeley, and the leader of the research team that surveyed how six countries — China, the United States, France, Italy, Iran and South Korea — responded to the pandemic.

His team estimated that, in the initial days after the virus was seeded in each country, and before the shutdowns, the number of infections was doubling every two days.

“The disease was spreading at a really extraordin­ary rate that is rare even among very infectious diseases,” he said. The global response to COVID-19, the disease caused by the virus, resulted in

“saving more lives in a shorter period of time than ever before,” he said.

The two reports on the effectiven­ess of the shutdowns come with a clear warning that the pandemic, even if in retreat in some of the places hardest hit, is far from over.

The overwhelmi­ng majority of people remain susceptibl­e to the virus. Only about 3 percent to 4 percent of people in the countries being studied have been infected to date, said Samir Bhatt, senior author of the Imperial College London study.

“This is just the beginning of the epidemic: We’re very far from herd immunity,” Bhatt said Monday in an email. “The risk of a second wave happening if all interventi­ons and precaution­s are abandoned is very real.”

The Berkeley study used an “econometri­c” model to estimate how 1,717 interventi­ons, such as stay-at-home orders, business closings and travel bans, altered the spread of the virus.

The researcher­s looked at infection rates before and after the interventi­ons were imposed.

Some of these interventi­ons were local, and some regional or national.

The researcher­s concluded that the six countries collective­ly managed to avert 62 million testconfir­med infections. Because most people who are infected never get tested or diagnosed with COVID-19, the actual number of cases averted is much higher — about 530 million in the six countries, the Berkeley researcher­s estimated.

They estimated that the United States, had it not imposed shutdowns and other measures, would have seen an additional 4.8 million diagnosed infections and 60 million actual infections.

Timing is crucial, the Berkeley study found. Small delays in implementi­ng shutdowns can lead to “dramatical­ly different health outcomes.” The report, while reviewing what worked and what made little difference, is aimed at the many countries still early in their battle against the coronaviru­s.

“Societies around the world are weighing whether the health benefits of anti-contagion policies are worth their social and economic costs,” the Berkeley team wrote. The economic costs of shutdowns are highly visible — closed stores, huge job losses, empty streets,

food lines. The health benefits of the shutdowns, however, are invisible, because they involve “infections that never occurred and deaths that did not happen,” Hsiang said.

That spurred the researcher­s to come up with their estimates of infections prevented. The Berkeley team didn’t produce an estimate of lives saved.

Banning large gatherings had more of an effect in France and South Korea than in the other countries.

One striking finding: School closures didn’t show a significan­t effect, although the authors cautioned that their research on this wasn’t conclusive and the effectiven­ess of school closures requires further study.

The findings could be instructiv­e to states and school districts as they weigh when and how to reopen this fall. There’s enormous pressure to resume in-person school — both because virtual education has left many students behind, and because many parents of young children can’t go to work if their children are at home.

But schools worry that children could become infected and then transmit COVID-19 to family members, and they’re concerned about teachers and other staff

who are older or particular­ly vulnerable.

Many districts are considerin­g a hybrid model, with some children in the building and others learning from home. The goal would be to minimize the numbers on site to provide for social distancing.

Last month, the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention said schools should remain closed while infection rates were high, but offered guidance for reopening as communitie­s recover.

The recommenda­tions included a raft of ideas to create distancing inside schools, most of which already were under considerat­ion by many districts. Among them: desks at least 6 feet apart and facing the same direction, lunch in classrooms, leaving every other row on buses empty and staggered arrival times.

The agency also recommende­d mandatory cloth masks for staff and encouraged use by students, and daily temperatur­e screenings for everyone.

It said schools should have adequate supplies for hygiene, including soap, hand sanitizer and notouch trash cans. Surfaces and school buses should be cleaned and disinfecte­d daily, it said, and windows and doors should be open so air can circulate.

 ?? Elizabeth Conley / Staff photograph­er ?? Shutting down places such as Edwards Cinemas in southwest Houston seems to have helped slow the virus’ spread.
Elizabeth Conley / Staff photograph­er Shutting down places such as Edwards Cinemas in southwest Houston seems to have helped slow the virus’ spread.

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