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In common with the thousands of people whose lives have been suddenly devastated by Covid-19, Ken Sazuze cannot know exactly when the coronavirus landed in his family and caused its terrible damage. His wife, Elsie, was 44, a well-loved nurse, mother of her children, Anna, 16, and Andrew, 22; she was his soulmate and best friend, a “genuine person,” she says. Elsie died on April 8, on a ventilator, at Good Hope Hospital in Birmingham.
Ken believes he became infected sometime in that creepy and terrifying week after Monday, March 16, when the Boris Johnson government reconsidered its previous approach, which had predicted that 60% of the population (40 million people) would become infected. , and while many would. die, most would recover and achieve “collective immunity”. That week, although Johnson had advised more physical distancing, normal life continued mainly until the mandatory closing; Pubs, restaurants, and gyms remained open, as did the schools, until Friday, March 20. Sazuze, who spent 10 years in the British Army before studying to be a nurse, says he “never liked the idea of herd immunity.”
“During those weeks, the spread of the virus was allowed,” he says. “We have suffered such a painful blow. I firmly believe that if the government had acted faster, we would not have lost as many lives, and my wife could be here today. “
Health Secretary Matt Hancock, supported by Downing Street, has persistently denied that achieving herd immunity by allowing the disease to infect most people has always been a policy, goal, strategy, or even “part of the plan”. Well-placed government sources said the stricter reading of the word “politics” may be true. But they do not understand how the government can claim that collective immunity was not part of their plan.
The Guardian’s report on the government’s response to the crisis is based on interviews with sources in or near Downing Street, the Department of Health and Social Assistance, the Cabinet Office, Cobra and Sage, as well as other advisers and experts. Many asked not to be named because they were not authorized to speak in public. Some said that while they had concerns, they were withholding some of their criticism because they did not want to damage public confidence in the government at such a delicate time. Everyone mistrusts being wise in hindsight and sympathizes with ministers who made decisions they deemed correct at the time.
But with Covid-19 spreading virulently, particularly during the first three weeks of March, more than 21,000 people have died in hospitals alone, and Britain is projected to be arguably the most affected country in Europe. There are deep questions to be answered, why the Johnson government stood alone among the countries of the world, following that approach of collective immunity, and why, when they realized that stricter measures were needed, the blockade was still delay.
Professor Neil Ferguson, the chief scientist for the Covid-19 response team at Imperial College London, whose advisory document of March 16 is credited with convincing the government to change course, extensively answered the Guardian’s questions to this article. He stressed that an alarming estimate in that document was not new: that under the “mitigation scenario,” which apparently viewed herd immunity as a result, and included measures that the government was considering, 250,000 people would die.
Brexit
Viewed from today’s unimaginably changed perspective, the months leading up to this year’s crisis may seem like a parallel world. Johnson’s media backers were celebrating him at the time for winning the “Get Brexit Done” election, and his private life, since criticized by some as a distraction, was portrayed as a cause for national joy when February 29 he and Carrie Symonds announced their engagement.
Following initial criticism, the government has released some details, releasing Nervtag members and meeting minutes, and some limited SPI-M and SPI-B documents. However, even these few documents establish that Covid-19’s catastrophic threat to life was clearly communicated to ministers by scientific advisers.
On March 2, a brief “consensus statement” from SPI-M reported very severe evaluations to Sage. “It is very likely that there is currently a sustained transmission of Covid-19 in the UK,” he said. The coronavirus was found to be highly contagious, with each infected person infecting two or three more. If “strict measures” were not imposed, “it would correspond to around 80% of the population [53 million people] get infected. “The best estimate of the death rate SPI-M was 0.5% to 1%: between 250,000 and 500,000 people. Of those requiring hospital treatment, 12% were likely to die. If, like Elsie Sazuze, they needed a fan, they only had a 50% chance of survival.
Johnson’s advice was, “Basically, we should all get on with our normal daily lives.” He also advised, “The best thing to do is wash your hands with soap and hot water while singing Happy Birthday twice.”
Over the next fortnight, when Italy moved to impose a blockade, France and Spain began to do the same, and Germany embarked on physical distancing measures alongside Europe’s most extensive contact testing and tracking operation, Britain did relatively little. Handwashing remained the top advice, along with isolating cases of people who felt symptoms.
The first official report of someone who died in the hospital and tested positive for Covid-19 captured in the UK came on March 5. Still, older and vulnerable people were given no advice to protect themselves. A member of a Sage advisory committee said that at this time there was a gap between scientific advice and political messages. “The prime minister was shaking hands with the people to demonstrate that there was no problem. There was a disconnect at that point. We were all a little incredulous that this was happening. “
Some experts believe Britain’s exceptional response came in part because government preparations for a pandemic were so affected by an influenza outbreak. Professor Graham Medley, a Sage member and president of SPI-M, who represents the scientific influenza pandemic, modeling, explains. “Everything, the government preparation, the modeling, was based on pandemic influenza. And that is not due to lack of awareness on our part, it is because that attracted the attention of the government and funding. We could persuade them that the flu was important. “The group’s terms of reference were eventually expanded to include different types of pandemics, but the emphasis remained.
Scientists are used to seeing flu spread through populations very quickly, then becoming milder as it mutates, and to seeing people develop immunity and populations becoming resistant. Covid-19 is lethally different, new, its properties more uncertain, and the idea of tackling it by allowing it to move through the population and achieve collective immunity was widely condemned for risking too many lives.
Group immunity
Given the repeated denials, it can be overlooked that the reason the world believes herd immunity was the government’s focus is largely because Vallance said yes. On Friday, March 13, when the virus was spreading exponentially, he set out to publicly explain the government’s strategy.
Few mitigation measures have yet been implemented. The week is remembered for the mega-events that followed: the Cheltenham Horse Racing Festival, the draw of the Liverpool Champions League v Atlético de Madrid, the Stereophonics concert in Cardiff. In allowing them, the government was, in fact, as it constantly said, following UK science which, surprisingly for many, considers “mass meetings” to have no major impact on transmission of the virus. The number of people infected will almost certainly never be known, but the images of the packed stands, particularly in Cheltenham, have become emblems of government delay and inaction.