Despite one of the world's highest vaccination rates, Britain is
facing a new wave of COVID-19. Johnson is taking a gamble: rather
than shutting the country down, he is aiming to live with the virus
in what is a world-first test case of the ability of vaccines to
protect from the Delta variant. (Graphic on global vaccinations)
https://tmsnrt.rs/3hG1IVb
Johnson has already delayed the so-called "freedom day" by four
weeks to allow more people to get vaccinated, after warning that
thousands more people might die because of the rapid spread of the
more infectious variant.
But with more than 86% of adults now having received a first dose
and nearly two-thirds of adults fully vaccinated, Johnson has set
July 19 as a "terminus" date for restrictions.
Anne Cori, an Imperial College epidemiologist behind one of the
models that informed Johnson's initial decision to delay "freedom
day", said it was premature to declare that the country can live
with rising cases. Another delay to removing restrictions would be
beneficial, she told Reuters.
"I think delaying buys time, and we have interventions in the
pipeline that may help reduce transmissibility," Cori said,
referring to booster shots and the possible vaccination of children,
a step Britain has yet to decide to take.
Over 100 scientists have written to the Lancet medical journal
calling Johnson's plan to lift all restrictions "dangerous and
premature", adding a strategy to tolerate high levels of infection
was "unethical and illogical."
But Johnson's government says it has more than just the
epidemiological perspective to consider, and is reconciled to more
deaths from COVID.
New health minister Sajid Javid has cited other health, education
and economic issues that have built up during the pandemic as
driving the need to return to normal, even if cases could reach
100,000 a day.
An intense debate has erupted between those who believe that the
summer school holiday holds the best hope for lifting restrictions
this year, and those who believe that Johnson - accused of having
brought on one of the world's highest fatality rates by waiting too
long to order previous lockdowns - is making another mistake.
In the case of the highly contagious Delta variant, vaccines appear
to do a better job of preventing deaths and severe disease than of
halting transmission. As a result, while Britain has been
experiencing a sharp rise in cases this summer, deaths have not
risen as quickly.
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Infections on a seven-day
average have now exceeded 25,000 a day, more
than 10 times the level in mid-May. So far,
however, the average number of fatalities per
day has held below 30 since mid-April, proof,
say scientists, that vaccines are saving lives.
Still, there are warning signs: Britain is currently seeing about
350 hospitalisations a day from COVID-19. While that's a fraction of
the rate at comparable points in previous waves, it is up around 45%
over the last 7 days.
In Israel, also among the world's fastest countries to deploy
vaccines and first to ease lockdown, infections have risen recently,
prompting the government to consider reimposing some restrictions
even though serious illness and deaths still remain low.
EXPERIMENT
Tim Spector, a King's College London epidemiologist who runs the
research project ZOE COVID Symptom Study app, said he welcomed the
government's recognition that the population must learn to live with
the coronavirus.
But he questioned steps such as announcing an end to the mandate to
wear face masks, which costs nothing to the economy and could help
protect vulnerable people as well as young people from the impact of
long COVID.
"There are things we can all do, that don't affect the economy ...
and I don't think that's been quite emphasised enough," he told
Reuters.
The British government is due to present updated models on July 12
from Imperial, Warwick and the London School of Hygiene and Tropical
Medicine, the date that Johnson is expected to make his final
decision on whether to lift restrictions a week later.
England's Chief Medical Officer Chris Whitty said modelling now
suggested the peak would not lead to the same pressures seen during
January.
David Spiegelhalter, chair of the Winton Centre for Risk and
Evidence Communication at Cambridge University, said that the
situation was delicate.
"This is an experiment, and I think we've got to call it that," he
told Reuters. "I respect the judgments by Chris Whitty and others
who say that if you're going to do this, this is the right time to
do it."
(Reporting by Alistair Smout; Editing by Josephine Mason and Peter
Graff)
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