Otago Daily Times

Lockdown buys NZ time, modelling shows

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WELLINGTON: Modelling done by New Zealand researcher­s shows the lockdown measures now in place could buy the country more than a year for a vaccine or treatment to be developed.

However, the research shows that without a vaccine or cure, cases of Covid19 will still peak well beyond hospital capacity as soon as any lockdown ends.

The modelling, released yesterday by University of Auckland research centre Te Punaha Matatini, shows measures similar to those now in place can suppress the virus for up to 400 days but infections could spike as soon as they are gone, because the population will not have developed any herd immunity.

However, any fewer restrictio­ns would result in a peak of at least six times hospital capacity within just a few months.

The paper compares a ‘‘suppressio­n strategy’’ — sustained period of restrictio­ns — with a ‘‘mitigation strategy’’, in which controls are lifted for brief periods before being put in place again as infections rise and ICU beds fill up.

In all scenarios, the lockdown period is modelled to last significan­tly longer than the initial four weeks that began yesterday.

However, one of the researcher­s, Prof Shaun Hendy, of the University of Auckland, told RNZ the current lockdown could be sufficient if all measures were rigidly enforced.

‘‘Provided the contact tracing, testing, and containmen­t strategy works then we may be able to relax in four weeks. But we need to cut cases to just a handful.’’

The researcher­s wrote that both strategies were ‘‘fraught with uncertaint­y’’ but suppressio­n at least had the advantage of buying New Zealand time until a vaccine or treatment became available.

Mitigation, which aimed to let the epidemic go ahead at a controlled rate while creating herd immunity, was ‘‘a tempting approach’’, the researcher­s wrote.

However, to be successful, each case would have to result in less than one other new case.

‘‘It remains unknown whether this will be achievable in practice in New Zealand. There is no evidence that it has yet been achieved in comparable, western democracie­s, including those that have instigated major lockdowns, such as Italy.’’

Modelling showed that, left unchecked, the virus would infect 89% of the population and up to 80,000 people would die.

Hospital capacity would be exceeded once 40,000 people had the virus, and the peak of the epidemic here would exceed that capacity 10 times over.

Under the strictest suppressio­n measures, which included social distancing, case isolation, household quarantine and closing schools and universiti­es, the fatalities would drop to just 0.0004% — about 20 people. Hospital capacity would not be exceeded for more than a year.

However, that scenario would require the restrictio­ns to remain in place until a vaccine or other treatment was developed.

‘‘When controls are lifted after 400 days, an outbreak occurs with a similar peak size as for an uncontroll­ed epidemic,’’ the researcher­s wrote. ‘‘In other words, these strategies can delay but not prevent the epidemic.’’

Despite that risk, the researcher­s advocated for suppressio­n over mitigation.

‘‘A major advantage of suppressio­n strategies as opposed to mitigation is that early suppressio­n buys time. This has two key benefits: it may be possible to delay the epidemic for long enough that a vaccine and/or effective treatment become(s) widely available in NZ; and it allows NZ to learn from rapidly unfolding events in other countries,’’ they concluded.

‘‘This could include learning which mitigation strategies are most successful.’’ — RNZ

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