The Economist USA - 21.03.2020

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18 Brlefln1 The pandemic



  • Anticipeting en •nciont
    Britain. mvid-19, critiail-care beds omipied per 100,000 population


Period in which interventions art
assumed to "main in place

.. ~, 1


Estimated
surga rru bed
apaclty:

A M J I A

-.--


Suppression stnitegy scenarios GI
for IQJ bed raqulll!ml!nts:
School and unlw111ty closure. JOO
cue Isolation and general
soc:iBI d"i.mincing
Case lsolallon, household
quarantine and pneral
social d"istancing

200

100

0
~ • - ~ M - - ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~
Sctmc Imperf al College QMj.19 2mo 2011
Rl!sponse Team, Mardi 16tti 2020

~ fear may increasiogly add its weight to gov-
ernment say-so and social stigma. Still.
good behaviour does tend to wear off.
south Korea started to take social dis-
13ncing seriously long before Europe did,
telling the citizens of Daegu and Gyeong-
buk, two early hotspots, to stay at home in
themiddleofFebnwyand those of metro-
poli13n Seoul to do so in early March. Pub-
lic spaces emptied out This was not the
only factor in the country's apparent suc-
cess in containing the disease. A huge
amount of testing and contact tlacing, as is
now being implemented In Italy, has been
crucial. But it helped. However there is
some evidence that people may be becom-
ing more restive. Use of the seoul metro
has ticked up a bit.
No government other than the most re-
pressive will believe it can keep its country
onlockdownformonthsonend-andeven
if it could, the economic effects would be
intolerable. China, having instituted a diil.-
conian lockdown. has, now that new cases
are rare, begun to ease some restrictions
where it can. A couple of provinces that

were not badly affected are starting to re-
open schools. In Beijing, by contlast, the
rules have tightened since orders went out
to protect the capital from imported infec-
tions. Office buildings are open, but ten-
ants must show that their workplaces are
not too crowded; some are allowing only a
half or a third of their staff in at any one
time. Guards with loud hailers count shop-
pers Jn and out of markets and cbldethose
who stand less than a metre apart.

Alldnattime
Citizens must wear masks to go outside:
after weeks of shortages these can now be
found, but at a price. In Hong Kong. where
there were admittedly very few cases, the
ubiquitous masks are the only indication
that the city is not quite back to normal-
whether you are on the as-crowded~
usual metto or at a rave, there is not an un-
shielded nostril to be seen.
Epidemiologically, these places have, in
a way, returned to the tail end of .2019. Just
as the world did then, they face a new
pathogen to which the population has no

The Economist March 21st 2020

immunity. But now they are forewarned.
They know about SARS-cov-2, and no lon-
ger see a need to try to deny its existence;
they know how to react should it rear its
head, and are ready to do so. 'Ihe emphasis
is thus not on suppression, but on hygiene
and surveillance.
China is using a variety of sma.rtphone
apps to facilitate this. In Shanghai QB.codes
are used to determine whether a person
can be admitted to a building, or even the
city-and to provide a detailed contact his-
tory should that person later be found to
havebecomeinfected.Eachsubwaycarbas
itsownQRcodeto be scanned when you get
on. If one of the passengers gets sick, only
that car, rather than the whole train, needs
to be contacted.
Citizens of other countries might be
willing to tolerate such surveillance if they
really believed it was tempomy. One thing
that might make it so would be better treat-
ment. Drugs do not make people immune
to disease; but if severe cases could be
treated more effectively, there would be
much less to fear about letting people cir-
culate quite freely. on March 17th Chinese
doctors reported thatAvigan (favipiravir), a
drug used against inftuenza in Japan, led to
clinical improvements in patients. The day
before a drug called hydroxychloroquine
jumped to prominence after a small, un-
randomised trial. Results from large trials
of remdesivir, an antiviral developed to
13clde Ebola. are weeks away but eagerly
anti cl.pated.
'Ihen there is the possibility of giving
people immunity without requiring them
to get the disease: that is, vaccination. The
first genome sequence for SARS-cov-2 was
published on January 10th. 'Ihe next morn-
ing Sarah Gilbert, a virologist at Oxford
University, headed stlaight for her labora-
tory to see what she could do to tum that
sequence into a vaccine-as did hundreds
of others at dozens of institutions and
companies.
Adrian Hill, a professor at Oxford, says
that in general terms ·m months from se-
quence to vaccination is very doable if the
right vaccine technology is used·. That
means vaccines could be in efficacy tests by
summer. There is a risk that they will not
work; some microbes. such as HIV and ma-
laria, have proved resistant to being imper-
sonated by vaccines for decades. But other
cases such as that of Ebola-have been
comparatively easily cracked.
suppression strategies may work for a
while. But there needs to be an exit strat-
egy-be it surveillance, improved treat-
ment, vaccination or whatever. If govern-
ments impose huge social and economic
costs and the virus cuts a swathe through
the population a little later. they will dis-
cover that when politicians disappoint the
people over something this serious there is
helltopay. •
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