Things are
moving fast in this outbreak. On February 22 I said there were five cases of
Covid-19 in Iran, two of whom had died; now (25 Feb 16:50 GMT) the Johns
Hopkins tracker https://gisanddata.maps.arcgis.com/apps/opsdashboard/index.html#/bda7594740fd40299423467b48e9ecf6
records 95 cases and sixteen
deaths. In Italy, seven have died (none, a few days ago) out of 283 cases so
far; the government has imposed travel restrictions on a dozen northern cities.
Why should the UK (13 cases, no deaths to date) escape the
scourge? Or rather, how?
We are only two months into the crisis and aside from
frantic research to find a vaccine (that may take a very long time), teams are trying
to estimate the likely spread of the disease. The standard model uses an
analysis known as ‘SEIR’: what proportion of the population is Susceptible
to catching it, how many of those will be Exposed to it, how many Infected,
how many will Recover.
There are only two of those categories that are amenable to
intervention: giving prompt, good medical treatment (but as we have seen, even
high-quality hospitals cannot always save the elderly and infirm); and better
still, preventing contagion. As to the latter, a Hungarian study published on
February 19 https://www.mdpi.com/2077-0383/9/2/571
looks at how the international spread of
Covid-19 could be limited, and concludes that countries with less frequent
connections to China should focus on entry screening or travel restrictions,
whereas those (like the UK) that have a high level of such connections should
focus on further measures to control infection after arrival.
The bad news from that paper (see Figure 4, right hand
graph) is that for us, even if numbers
of visitors from China are halved and the rate of exposure to others once they
are here is cut significantly, the probability of a major outbreak in the UK
rises above 50 per cent as total cases in China (outside Hubei province) exceed
600,000. The authors’ graph implies that we are more at risk even than Germany,
France and Italy.
In a world that is economically interconnected, the
authorities are conflicted, trying to balance safety precautions with the need
to keep the trading show on the road. We saw the World Health Organisation
first argue against travel restrictions https://www.abc.net.au/news/2020-02-05/who-coronavirus-update-china-travel/11930752
and then warn us that the virus was a ‘serious and imminent threat’ https://www.euronews.com/2020/02/10/coronavirus-outbreak-uk-declares-virus-serious-and-imminent-threat-to-public-health
; now it is telling us that the epidemic has peaked in China https://www.dailymail.co.uk/health/article-8039517/Coronavirus-epidemic-PEAKED-China-says-World-Health-Organisation.html , despite the culture of secrecy there that
means we might not know the whole truth.
In the UK, the government attempts a similar compromise: its
advice to transport workers https://www.gov.uk/government/publications/covid-19-guidance-for-staff-in-the-transport-sector/covid-19-guidance-for-staff-in-the-transport-sector
assures them that they ‘are not considered to be at a heightened risk of
contracting coronavirus as a result of their work’ and that ‘staff are not
recommended to wear respiratory masks. They do not provide protection from
respiratory viruses.’ Passengers arriving via direct flights from specified
areas will be given ‘health announcements [… and] a general declaration 60
minutes before landing on any passenger health issues or suspected cases’; and
so on. The latest advice for arrivals from northern Italy is that they should
self-isolate https://www.bbc.co.uk/news/uk-51625733
.
The British approach may seem too soft-handed, but the
alternative strategy of grasping the nettle tightly could be doomed. Although
Wuhan, the epicentre of the outbreak, was officially locked down on January 23,
this Twitter user https://twitter.com/jenniferatntd/status/1231374535250841600
says cellphone data shows that nearly 140,000 people escaped the city in the
first two weeks of February alone. MedPage Today says https://www.medpagetoday.com/infectiousdisease/publichealth/85027
that it is possible for the illness to be transmitted by carriers who show no
symptoms themselves; they describe a case of a young Chinese woman who inadvertently
infected five members of her family. A report from Imperial College, London https://www.imperial.ac.uk/news/195564/two-thirds-covid-19-cases-exported-from-mainland/
says that two-thirds of Covid-19 cases that have left China may have gone
undetected. In Europe, others may also choose to break quarantines, like that
set on northern Italian towns https://www.dw.com/en/coronavirus-life-around-italys-quarantined-red-zone/a-52513830
- for example, just across the border in Hohenturn, Austria, a brothel services
hundreds of visiting Italians every weekend https://kaernten.orf.at/stories/3036029/
(htp: ‘Raedwald’ https://raedwald.blogspot.com/2020/02/covid-19-living-with-threat.html
) and, it seems, Austrian law does not permit the State to impose Italian-type cordons
sanitaires. New Scientist magazine says that battle may already be lost https://www.newscientist.com/article/2234967-covid-19-our-chance-to-contain-the-coronavirus-may-already-be-over/
.
How bad could it get? On 12 February Professor Neil Ferguson
told Radio 4’s Today programme https://www.theguardian.com/world/2020/feb/13/coronavirus-medical-chief-says-uk-hopes-to-delay-any-outbreak-until-summer
that if the disease got out of control in the UK, potentially 60 per cent of
the population could be infected and if the fatality rate is one per cent the
toll could run into hundreds of thousands. The latter may well be an under-estimate;
outside mainland China it’s over 1.5 per cent (42 deaths out of 2,690 cases,
and many of those still sick have yet to recover) and on the Chinese mainland
it’s about 3.5 per cent (2,705 deaths from 77,660 cases.)
As with flu generally, old people with underlying health
problems are most at risk, but that does not mean the rest of us can be
sanguine. Imagine a country where 60 percent of teachers, medical and emergency
staff, port workers, passenger transport staff, delivery drivers etc are off
sick, even if only on a rolling basis of infection (and possibly even
re-infection) over months. The disruption to the economy could be far greater –
and far closer to home - than temporary swoons on the stockmarkets https://www.washingtonexaminer.com/news/stock-markets-around-the-world-slide-as-coronavirus-outbreak-becomes-potential-pandemic?utm_source=breaking_push&utm_medium=app&utm_campaign=push_notifications . The modern system of just-in-time resupply could become
too-late, please-wait.
Hope for the best, but prepare for
the worst: prudent citizens may have to do more than just wash their hands.
1 comment:
From the little that I know, it is slightly comforting that re-infection is extremely rare.
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