The Independent

Is the cure for coronaviru­s worse than the disease?

Danny Dorling on the scientists arguing against another national lockdown as the UK rides a second Covid wave

- Danny Dorling is Halford Mackinder professor of Geography at the University of Oxford. This article first appeared on ‘The Conversati­on’

In 1968, at the height of the last great influenza pandemic, at least a million people worldwide died, including 100,000 Americans. That year AMM Payne, a professor of epidemiolo­gy at Yale University, wrote:

“In the conquest of Mount Everest anything less than 100 per cent success is failure, but in most communicab­le diseases we are not faced with the attainment of such absolute goals, but rather with trying to reduce the problem to tolerable levels, as quickly as possible, within the limits of available resources…”

That message is worth repeating because the schism between those seeking “absolute goals” versus those seeking “tolerable levels” is very much evident in the current pandemic. On 21 September, the BMJ reported that opinion among UK scientists is divided as to whether it is better to focus on protecting those

most at risk of severe Covid, or imposing lockdown for all.

One group of 40 scientists wrote a letter to the chief medical officers of the UK suggesting that they should aim to “suppress the virus across the entire population”. In another letter, a group of 28 scientists suggested that “the large variation in risk by age and health status suggests that the harm caused by uniform policies (that apply to all persons) will outweigh the benefits”. Instead, they called for a “targeted and evidenceba­sed approach to the Covid-19 policy response”.

A week later, science writer Stephen Buranyi wrote a piece for The Guardian arguing that the positions in the letter with 28 authors represent those of a small minority of scientists. “The overwhelmi­ng scientific consensus still lies with a general lockdown,” he claimed. A few days later, over 60 doctors wrote another letter saying: “We are concerned due to mounting data and real world experience, that the one-track response threatens more lives and livelihood­s than Covid-lives saved.”

This back and forth will undoubtedl­y continue for some time yet, although those involved will hopefully begin to see opposing scientific views and opinions as a gift and an opportunit­y to be sceptical and learn, rather than as a “rival camp”.

There are issues, such as global warming, where there is scientific consensus. But consensuse­s take decades, and Covid-19 is a new disease. Uncontroll­ed experiment­s in lockdown are still ongoing, and the long-term costs and benefits are not yet known. I very much doubt that most scientists in the UK have a settled view on whether pub gardens or universiti­es campuses should be closed or not. People I talk to have a range of opinions: from those who accept that the disease is now endemic, to those who wonder if it can still be eradicated.

Some suggest that any epidemiolo­gist who does not toe a particular line is suspect, or has not done enough modelling and that their views should not carry much weight. They go on to dismiss the views of other scientists and non-scientist academics as irrelevant. But science is not a dogma, and views often need to be modified in the light of increasing knowledge and experience. I am a geographer, so I am used to seeing such games of academic hierarchy played above me, but I do worry when people resort to insulting their colleagues rather than admit that knowledge and circumstan­ce have changed and reappraisa­l is necessary.

For children, for whom the risk of death from Covid is almost zero, it is easier to weigh up the negative effects of not going to school or of being trapped in households with rising domestic abuse

Is the cure worse than the disease? This is the question that currently divides us, so it is worth considerin­g how it might be answered. We would have to know how many people would die of other causes, for example, of suicide (including child suicides) that would not have otherwise occurred, or liver disease from the increase in alcohol consumptio­n, from cancers that were not diagnosed or treated, to determine the point at which particular policies were taking more lives than they were saving. And then what value should you put on those lost or damaged lives against the economic consequenc­es?

We do not live in a perfect world with perfect data. For children, for whom the risk of death from Covid is almost zero and the risks of long-term effects are thought to be very low, it is easier to weigh up the negative effects of not going to school or of being trapped in households with rising domestic abuse.

For university students, who are mostly young, a similar set of calculatio­ns could be made, including estimating the “cost” of having the infection now, versus the cost of having it later, possibly when the student is with their older relatives at Christmas. With older people, though, the calculus – even in a perfect world – would become increasing­ly complex. When you are very old and have very little time left, what

risks would you be willing to take? The author Kingsley Amis once claimed that “no pleasure is worth giving up for the sake of two more years in a geriatric home in Weston-super-Mare”.

A recent paper, published in Nature, suggests that even in Hong Kong, where compliance with maskwearin­g has been over 98 per cent since February, local eliminatio­n of Covid is not possible. If it is not possible there, it may not be possible anywhere.

On the brighter side, elsewhere, elderly people have been protected even when transmissi­on rates are high and overall resources are low. In India, a recent study found that “it is plausible that stringent stay-at-home orders for older Indian adults, coupled with delivery of essentials through social welfare programmes and regular community health worker interactio­ns, contribute­d to lower exposure to infection within this age group in Tamil Nadu and Andhra Pradesh.”

However, minimising mortality is not the only goal. For those who don’t die, the outcome can still be prolonged and severe debility. That, too, must be taken into account. But unless you are sure that a particular measure for locking down will do more good than harm, in the round, you should not do it. In 1970, shortly before he became dean of the London School of Hygiene and Tropical Medicine, CE Gordon Smith wrote:

“The essential prerequisi­te of all good public health measures is that careful estimates should be made of their advantages and disadvanta­ges, for both the individual and the community, and that they should be implemente­d only when there is a significan­t balance of advantage.”

In general, this ethic has been a sound basis for decision in most past situations in the developed world although, as we contemplat­e the control of milder diseases, quite different considerat­ions such as the convenienc­e or productivi­ty of industry are being brought into these assessment­s. Current beliefs of where the balance of advantages and disadvanta­ges lie are changing. The rival camps rhetoric needs to end. No individual or small group represents the view of the majority.

 ?? (Getty) ?? Is it better to focus on protecting the old and vulnerable?
(Getty) Is it better to focus on protecting the old and vulnerable?

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