Santa Fe New Mexican

NOT ALL OR NOTHING

Anti-virus lockdowns could lift slowly

- By Christina Larson and Ricardo Alonso-Zaldivar

FWASHINGTO­N or the millions of Americans living under some form of lockdown to curb the spread of the coronaviru­s, not knowing when the restrictio­ns will end is a major source of anxiety. Will life events — weddings, funerals, even just simple nights out with friends — be delayed for a few weeks, a few months or much longer?

President Donald Trump gave one answer last week, saying he hoped businesses would reopen by Easter, on April 12, citing the severe damage restrictio­ns have done to the economy. Most public health experts, however, caution that it would be reckless to lift restrictio­ns before COVID-19 infections have peaked and begun to ebb — unleashing a second wave of cases that could be just as damaging to the economy.

On Sunday evening, Trump extended social-distancing measures through the end of April.

Scientists are reluctant to predict exactly when restrictio­ns could be safely loosened, but based on what they’ve observed in China — the first country struck by the new virus — some relief could come approximat­ely six to eight weeks after lockdowns are implemente­d. That is based on the assumption that cases could peak two or three weeks after lockdowns begin, and gradually decline for the next two or three weeks.

While we may yearn for a clear timeline for when life will return to normal, scientists say that isn’t exactly the right question. Routines won’t resume exactly as they were for several months, or longer — but that doesn’t mean we’ll all be stuck in total lockdowns until then. “We can’t simply wait inside for two years for a COVID19 vaccine” to be developed, said Stephen Morse, a disease researcher at Columbia University. “We have to find some way to return to normal life.”

Decisions on how and when to lift restrictio­ns, he added, should be based on informatio­n about infection rates that can only be learned by increasing testing. That will allow policymake­rs to tailor restrictio­ns to fit the outbreak in different areas.

Rather than imagining the lockdown as having an on/off switch — where the only choice is between completely shutting down the country or throwing all rules out the window — many scientists advocate for charting a course in between, where restrictio­ns can be ramped up or down. Imagine that the lockdown has a volume dial that can be twisted up or down. “With more informatio­n, we can target our responses to be the most impactful,” said Nadia Abuelezam, a disease researcher at Boston College. That might mean introducin­g people back into the workforce in stages, she suggested.

Scientists are closely watching what happens in other countries that were struck earlier by the coronaviru­s to see what happens when those places loosen restrictio­ns.

Restaurant­s and offices have begun to reopen in many Chinese cities, about two months after the country began to lock down. There are still restrictio­ns in place — such as limits in how many people can occupy an elevator or a conference room — and widespread testing for the disease continues.

A second outbreak could prompt future clampdowns. “People should be prepared for the fact that we are not going back to completely normal life for a while,” said Mark Jit, a disease researcher at the London School of Hygiene and Tropical Medicine. “But we also need to allow people to see the light at end of the tunnel.”

The metaphoric­al dial of restrictio­ns could be set in different positions, depending on what expanded testing reveals about how many people in an area are currently infected — and how many have recovered from past infections. The goal would be to allow people to partially return to their daily routines while limiting the chances of new infections.

The new coronaviru­s causes mild or moderate symptoms in many people, but even if only a fraction of cases are severe enough to require hospitaliz­ation — between 14 percent and 20 percent — the scale of the epidemic puts enormous strain on hospitals, health care workers and other patients who may see unrelated procedures delayed.

On Thursday came a grim milestone and reminder that the United States has not begun to flatten the curve: The total number of confirmed infections surpassed China’s toll. Johns Hopkins University reported over 142,000 cases in the U.S. on Sunday. The White House is now considerin­g a datadriven approach. In a letter Thursday to governors, Trump said his administra­tion was planning to expand “robust surveillan­ce testing, which allows us to monitor the spread of the virus throughout the country.”

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 ?? MARY ALTAFFER ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? Yellow cabs line an empty 42nd Street on Wednesday waiting for fares outside Grand Central Terminal in New York. For the millions of Americans living under some form of lockdown to curb the spread of the new coronaviru­s, not knowing when the restrictio­ns will end is a major source of anxiety.
MARY ALTAFFER ASSOCIATED PRESS Yellow cabs line an empty 42nd Street on Wednesday waiting for fares outside Grand Central Terminal in New York. For the millions of Americans living under some form of lockdown to curb the spread of the new coronaviru­s, not knowing when the restrictio­ns will end is a major source of anxiety.

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