The Guardian (USA)

The Guardian view on herd immunity: yes it was ‘part of the plan’

- Editorial

In his seminal work, The Structure of Scientific Revolution­s, the philosophe­r of science Thomas Kuhn developed the notion of the “paradigm” as a way of understand­ing how a community of researcher­s makes its judgments. A shared paradigm, observed Kuhn, is a mode of seeing a problem that makes certain presumptio­ns and privileges particular perspectiv­es. It sees things.

But it also misses things.

As the coronaviru­s pandemic spread across the world, the British government relied on the wrong paradigm. The health secretary, Matt Hancock, has insisted that herd immunity – the idea that allowing a virus to spread will eventually build up sufficient resistance in a population – was never a “part of the plan” in the battle against Covid-19. But today’s Guardian’s investigat­ion into the government’s early handling of the crisis leaves little room for doubt: the concept was fundamenta­l to the government’s decisionma­king in the crucial months of February and March, as most of the rest of the world took a different path. It was abandoned only when it became clear that the NHS would be utterly overwhelme­d and hundreds of thousands of Britons could conceivabl­y die.

There were other reasons why Britain remained a relatively relaxed outlier in early March, as Italy, France and Spain moved towards lockdowns and

Germany followed South Korea in pursuing a rigorous test, trace and contact strategy. The distractio­n of Brexit played a part. A reluctance on the part of Boris Johnson to overly impinge on the rights of “free-born Englishmen” also influenced government strategy. It may have been assumed that because outbreaks of deadly diseases such as Sars-CoV had been confined to Asia, the new coronaviru­s would follow a similar

pattern. Our investigat­ion also suggests that ministers could have exaggerate­d the likely resistance from the public to more stringent measures.

Above all, though, the framework was wrong. The laissez-faire blueprint for the government’s response to the crisis was overwhelmi­ngly derived from previous experience of pandemic influenza. In the absence of a vaccine, flu spreads fast, becomes milder as it mutates, and population­s can eventually acquire resistance once a majority of people have become infected. Herd immunity, distastefu­l as it sounds, can work. But as we now know, Covid-19 is horribly, devastatin­gly different. In the words of David Nabarro, the World Health Organizati­on’s envoy to Britain: “Coronaviru­ses are horrible. You can’t just let this thing … wash over your society, because it will kill lots of old people, and a few younger people, it will make hospitals into a big mess and it will endanger health workers.”

Britain finally entered into lockdown on 23 March. By then, the despair of overwhelme­d Italian doctors had been broadcast around the world. That footage, and a now famous Imperial College advice paper, which predicted up to 250,000 deaths if the government’s strategy was continued, smashed the herd immunity framework. The same figure had appeared in a 2 March paper. Only now did it concentrat­e ministeria­l minds.

Well over 26,000 Britons have died from Covid-19 and there are fears that Britain will emerge from the crisis with the worst fatality rate in Europe. The ministeria­l mantra has been that “the right decisions were taken at the right time”. But lives would have been saved if rigorous social distancing had been imposed earlier and the transmissi­on of the virus reduced. This is a truth that should be acknowledg­ed by the prime minister and his government. But it should also inform policymaki­ng now that the debate has turned to easing the lockdown amid fears of economic collapse. There is still no vaccine – and nothing approachin­g a herd immunity strategy can be contemplat­ed again. Until a testing regime can be establishe­d that matches the efficiency of those in Germany and South Korea, stringent restrictio­ns must remain. No more unnecessar­y risks should be taken with people’s lives.

 ?? Photograph: Leon Neal/AFP via Getty Images ?? Boris Johnson. ‘The concept of herd immunity was fundamenta­l to the government’s decision-making in the crucial months of February and March.’
Photograph: Leon Neal/AFP via Getty Images Boris Johnson. ‘The concept of herd immunity was fundamenta­l to the government’s decision-making in the crucial months of February and March.’

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