As
international experience has been accumulated it has become clearer and clearer
that going hard and fast with isolation and distancing will help save lives and
avoid illness.
It is also clear
that no-one is immune from this virus, so we all need to be careful.
The other
point that is worth making is that earlier today the Prime Minister has made it
clear that much more draconian restrictions and isolation requirements are coming!
Others have offered
similar views and I think action is needed sooner rather than later.
From the
Conversation we have:
The case for Endgame C: stop almost everything, restart when coronavirus is gone
1. John Daley
Chief Executive Officer, Grattan Institute
The
differences between endgames amount to tens of thousands of avoidable deaths,
hundreds of thousands of avoidable hospital admissions, and deep and systemic
impacts on Australia’s economy and society.
Many
discussions are underestimating the likely political reactions when death
counts rise.
They
are also underestimating the economic and social consequences of an open-ended
epidemic that will have enormous real-world impacts on small and medium
businesses, as well as many not-for-profit organisations in every sector of the
economy and society. We are not facing up to the social consequences if many
close, and credit markets collapse.
We
see three possible endgames.
None
is attractive, but one is better than the others.
Endgame A: ‘flatten the curve’
Endgame
A is the
plan to “flatten
the curve” – restricting movements in order to lower the peak in cases,
while accepting that infections will continue to grow until the epidemic has
run its course. There will be many deaths.
Imperial
College has demonstrated that even if Britain flattens the curve, the peak
months would still overwhelm hospital intensive care capacity, (particularly
ventilators) by eight times instead of 30, perhaps halving the ultimate death
toll.
Australia
is also likely to run out of intensive care capacity when there are about 45,000
infections - a small fraction of the population.
In
reality, political economy will probably get in the way of continued growth of
infections. Public pressure to “shut everything” will become overwhelming as
infections rise and hospitals struggle. But by then, with exponential growth in
infections from a greater base, the containment challenge will be much greater.
Once
infection rates fall in response to the shutdown, there is a risk of public
pressure to open again too early, increasing infections until the death rate
again becomes unacceptable – what economist Tyler Cowen has dubbed the “epidemic
yoyo”.
Whether
that happens or not, flattening the curve will require us to suppress economic
and social activity for at least 12 months, and possibly much longer. The
economic - and social - cost will be enormous.
No
matter how much money governments throw at the economy, most businesses cannot
survive the absence of normal activity for more than a few months.
It
is not just tourism and hospitality. Companies small and large across sectors
from household services to manufacturing to construction, are developing and
executing plans to sack hundreds of thousands of people.
Unemployment
will soar, probably driving a sharp fall in house prices, causing big problems
for banks.
A
variant of Endgame A is to isolate everyone over 60 (the age group most at
risk), infect as many younger people as possible, and then hope that the
disease dies out.
It’s
not really plausible. There would be continued pockets of infection in many
places, and they would quickly turn into localised outbreaks, particularly in
nursing homes. It would be very hard to keep everyone over 60 separate from the
people who provide them with food and services (who are likely to get infected)
for months.
And
of course there will be some deaths among those under 60.
Endgame B: ‘trace and track’
Endgame
B is to trace and track every infection, something governments are trying to
do.
But
as NSW has now discovered, with thousands of potentially infected people
getting off planes every day, and little enforcement of voluntary isolation,
it’s easy for untracked infection to take off, and then it becomes practically
impossible for subsequent tracking to shut it down. It is too easy for the
number of new infections to overwhelm the tracking system, and then we are back
in Endgame A.
Endgame
B is only plausible if you start with very few infections and have sealed
borders. Tasmania is now in that world, but other Australian states are not.
Endgame C: ‘stop then restart’
Endgame
C is to “stop then restart”. This means minimising activity and interactions,
and sealing the borders to passenger traffic including citizens (although not
trade), until infections are driven down to zero.
Only
essential services would be maintained (particularly the food supply chain and
utilities such as electricity, water and the internet).
There
is no point trying to finesse which strategies work best; instead the
imperative would be to implement as many as possible at once, including closing
schools, universities, colleges, public transport and non-essential retail, and
confining people to their homes as much as possible.
Police
should visibly enforce the lockdown, and all confirmed cases should be housed
in government-controlled facilities. This might seem unimaginable, but it is
exactly what has already happened in China, South Korea and Italy.
Once
infections are at zero, and stay there for a fortnight or so to ensure there
are no asymptomatic cases, economic and social activity can restart sequentially,
although international borders would have to remain closed to passenger traffic
until there is a vaccine.
We’re better at tracking people
Governments
would also need to implement widespread testing and tracking to identify and
squash any recurrence (something the shutdown would give them time to set up
and improve).
This
will be much easier once we are not dealing with a continued flow of new
infections from passenger traffic.
Some
epidemiologists, such as those from Imperial College, dismiss this approach,
saying renewed large outbreaks are “inevitable”. But that is only based on
history and past measures to track and trace. Today’s have
no precedent.
We
don’t yet have China’s ability to track and trace. But in a national emergency,
setting up systems to track people and their contacts using mobile data might
be worth both the money and the invasion of privacy.
While
some people would like to execute this strategy without shutting passenger
borders hard and for a long time, it is not plausible.
Even
today, almost half of Australia’s new cases are getting off planes, and every one
of them increases the risks of recurrence. Mere voluntary isolation is nothing
like safe enough.
An
alternative might be to allow Australian citizens to enter, provided they go
into enforced isolation in a quarantine station room – for which airport hotels
could be repurposed.
China, South Korea and Tasmania are doing it
In
effect, Endgame C appears to be the strategy of China and South Korea – and
domestically Tasmania is heading in the same direction.
Endgame
C appears to be working so far in China, where the only new cases on Thursday
were incoming
passengers, each of whom is required to spend 14 days in supervised isolation
in a designated hotel.
In
Endgame C, it is plausible the shutdown would only need to last about eight
weeks.
The
mathematics of exponential growth also work in reverse: if the infection rate
is below 1, instead of above 2 as it is now, then large numbers of cases turn
into small numbers quickly.
China
went from 4,000 new cases per day to 20 per day in six weeks with an infection
rate that dropped below 0.5.
In
Australia, if we achieved an infection rate of even 0.8, new infections per day
would reduce from 100 to 10 in about six weeks, at which point track and trace
becomes much more effective.
If
Endgame C is the dominant strategy, it makes sense to implement it immediately
and aggressively. The longer we wait, the longer that economic activity has to
remain at a standstill to get back to zero cases.
Endgame C could offer hope
Endgame
C isn’t pretty. Until a vaccine is deployed - and we’re punting that there will
be a vaccine - there will be no meaningful international travel, tourism or
students for at least 12 months. But most of these those things won’t be
happening under Endgames A or B either.
At
least Endgame C would allow domestic travel and tourism, hospitality, and other
domestic activity once the shutdown was over. If our major trading partner –
China – also successfully executes the same strategy, our major exports might
continue as well.
More
importantly, if it is communicated clearly, Endgame C would give businesses a
plausible end date.
They
would have a reason to hang on if government intervenes to tide them over.
Measures
might include forgiving taxes, paying a fraction of wages (but also requiring
employees to be paid less overall), mandating big temporary rent reductions
(landlords are typically better placed to absorb losses than small businesses),
providing loans, and encouraging – or requiring – banks to suspend loan
repayments and perhaps interest payments.
Psychologically,
it would provide genuine hope. We should aim for eight weeks, and provision for
twelve in case it is harder than we expect.
An eight to twelve week shutdown
That
relatively short duration would enable governments to intervene better to hold
society and the economy together.
The
government’s strategy would focus on providing a large social insurance policy
that tides people and businesses over until the shutdown ends.
The
goal would be to ensure we emerged out of the trough with human and physical
capital and institutions in good shape. We need to avoid deskilling and
demoralising workers and destroying businesses that will not be reborn easily.
This
will require very large expenditure from government, which the government can
afford if the shutdown is short enough.
Endgame
C is not available to every country. The disease has already spread too far in
Iran, and may have done so in the United States. It’s a difficult strategy for
countries with big land borders with neighbours that let the disease run.
Australia can do it, though others cannot
Australia
has the advantage of being an island, with a major trading partner that seems
to be adopting the same strategy. This time around, we might be the less
unlucky country – if we can act quickly and decisively.
It’s
possible that Endgame C might not work. Despite our best efforts, we might not
be able to reduce infections, or the disease might recur when we think it has
been eliminated.
But
the costs of giving it a try are relatively low – in both lives and economic
costs – compared with Endgame A.
In
the worst case, it gives us more time to increase critical care capacity and
prepare for Endgame A.
The
logic is compelling: if we’re not going to pursue Endgame C (stop then
restart), at the very least authorities ought to explain why it is not
technically possible.
Each
of the endgames are unpleasant. COVID-19 is the real-life “trolley problem” in
which someone is asked to choose between killing a few or killing many.
When
any of us are presented with the trolley problem, the all-but universal
response is to refuse to choose.
That
is what we are doing at the moment, and it will just make our problems worse.
We
should recognise this psychology, and decide to choose the least-bad endgame.
The
faster we do it, the less bad it will be.
Here is the
link:
Also we have
this:
Coronavirus: Even glass-half-full optimists can do the maths
“Do the maths.” Whether intentionally or
otherwise, in just three words, Deputy Chief Medical Officer Paul Kelly
highlighted the gravity of the coronavirus in a way no politician has been
willing to.
It’s
the projected death toll that is most staggering. Indeed, that reality, and
how profoundly it will impact on the Australian and global societies, is at the
heart of the panic that has engulfed the planet.
Make
no mistake: we are living through extraordinary times. And as one government MP
said to me during the week: “We aren’t even at the end of the beginning yet.”
Doing
the maths as to how many among us might fall victim to this virus is truly
mind-boggling. We are constantly being told to listen to the experts. Hear
what the medical professionals have to say. It is those same experts who say that
the virus could easily infect between five million and 15 million Australians.
Their assessment is that the genie is most likely already out of the bottle,
and hopes of containing the virus such that it doesn’t spread so dramatically
are wishful thinking.
Do the maths.
Politicians are hopeful that Australia’s infection rate can be
slowed down — which is the so-called flattening of the curve. It’s not about
containment. Rather, the aim is merely to spread out the time period during
which so many of us catch the illness so that the hospital system can cope.
That matters because exactly how well or badly the hospitals handle the crisis
has a direct impact on the mortality rate.
If we do well, the mortality rate might match South Korea’s 0.7
per cent rate. In other words 7000 people die for every million who contract
the virus.
While the government might want to stay glass-half-full and point
to the fact that 80 per cent of people who are infected have only mild
symptoms, that leaves one in five people who get it doing worse than that.
If between five million and 15 million Australians are infected,
doing the best-case maths on the mortality rate to follow would mean 35,000-105,000
Australians will die from the coronavirus.
I have heard shock jocks play down the risks, pointing to how many
Australians get cancer in their lifetimes and so on. But these figures are
based on infections over the next six months, not over many decades.
What all nations are hoping to avoid is matching what has happened
to Italy, where the virus is not only spreading rapidly but the mortality rate
is closer to 7 per cent.
Do the maths.
Much more here:
Next some
really current graphs that are self-explanatory.
To me, as a
biological scientist and physician the evidence is pretty conclusive and we
really need to move to much tighter restrictions ASAP, or we will all be in pretty big trouble.
(Sorry, in
advance, this is not Digital Health. This is rather a bigger issue in my mind!)
David.
There might be two costly lessons come out of this
ReplyDelete1. We seem to lack the ability to govern or be governed. The complete lack of respect in what our governing institutions are saying exposes a rapid breakdown in the relationship between the people and its representative houses. Long have we lived with spin and BS, it is almost like the little villager that cried wolf.
2. Our actual real and meaningful health system has like many countries been for too long, underfunded, poorly equipped and diluted of funds ( too much gone into far too expensive ‘systems of record” tech). We can no longer run health on Agile and Lean thinking. The current events show that our current health system lacks capacity and capability. It's a bit like the cheap private health insurance you buy to avoid tax penalties but do not cover the people on the policy for much.
Anon March 22, 4:57 PM. You might find this article interesting.
ReplyDelete@8:46 P What article are you referring to?
ReplyDeleteYes the link might help thanks
ReplyDeletehttps://www.project-syndicate.org/commentary/greater-risk-literacy-can-reduce-coronavirus-fear-by-gerd-gigerenzer-2020-03
As a counter to the current doom and gloom being peddled on the rating chasing 24/7 news and media. Looking at the recovery rates are good. Preventative measures might be helping along with those magnificent people in healthcare. Hopefully, all governments start wisely investing and remove some who pillage health budgets with over proceed underperforming products and services
ReplyDelete1,300 - Currently Infected Patients
1,298 (100%) - in Mild Condition
2 (0%) - Serious or Critical
Source: https://www.worldometers.info/coronavirus/country/australia/
Anon @ 8.37am
ReplyDeleteDon't forget the 7 deaths so far....on the same page.
David.
Long Live T.38. Thank you for the link to the article. It is a well written set of points-of-view.
ReplyDeleteThe $2 billion spent on My Health Record could buy a lot of ventilators.
ReplyDeleteThat article is astonishing. Still with the 'flu is worse' PoV, while advising people should have good risk literacy... wow.
ReplyDeleteAs with a lot of other things: this won't age well
I think the author is not saying "flu" is worse, but pointing out that we do not react to other serious events as we seem to be with this "pandemic" for the average person on the street it is puzzling. In that context the author highlights a trait in human nature.
ReplyDeleteI guess now it is hitting less developed parts of the world that are not as well placed to "shut-down" how well herd immunity might work.
I am not advocating for any one position I am sure there will be time enough for reflection in the not to distant future.