The COVID-19 Catastrophe. Richard Horton

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Scientists have estimated that the variant has a 50 to 75 per cent transmission advantage over the original ‘wild type’. The R0 of the Wuhan coronavirus was 2.5. The R0 of B.1.1.7 lies somewhere between 2.9 and 3.2, a substantial leap in transmissibility. Although the new variant may not directly increase the number of deaths, the higher incidence of infection because of its enhanced transmissibility will indirectly increase mortality. Of special concern is the pattern of mutations in the new variant. Multiple potentially important alterations in the virus genome affect that part of the spike (S) protein binding to receptors on human cells. If sufficient numbers of mutations change the S protein in meaningful ways, the virus may be able to escape vaccine protection and evade treatments using specific antibody cocktails of the kind given to President Trump. The emergence of B.1.1.7 will not be the last surprise of this pandemic.

      The purpose of this second edition is not only to update figures. I have revised each chapter to try to take account of new discoveries, perspectives and interpretations. I have added an introduction that aims to reframe our understanding of COVID-19 in ways that have important consequences for protecting our communities from future pandemics. I have tried to survey some of the most difficult controversies that have emerged and what those disputes tell us about our societies. And I have added an epilogue that tries to give a provisional judgement on what the pandemic means for our future. For COVID-19 is not only a new disease caused by a new virus. It is an inflection point in our understanding about ourselves and the planet we inhabit.

      COVID-19 is a pandemic of paradoxes.

      Most of those who became infected with this new coronavirus suffered only mild disease, perhaps not easily shaken off, yet shaken off nevertheless. But a substantial number – perhaps as many as one in five – developed a much more severe illness, often requiring intensive care and mechanical ventilation. For far too many, COVID-19 meant that death was their destiny.

      Being older and poorer and living with chronic disease were important risks for worse outcomes. Yet a significant proportion of those who endured severe illness were also young and previously fit and well.

      The scientific community made an astonishing contribution to producing the new knowledge needed to guide a response to COVID-19. But many questions about the virus and the disease it causes remain unanswered, leaving important gaps in our understanding of the pandemic that make its control, even with the availability of several safe and effective vaccines, exceptionally difficult.

      Countries pledged their support to international cooperation to defeat the pandemic. Yet those same countries were embarrassingly slow to match words with deeds, and too often they resorted to rivalry and blame.

      This was a pandemic that was described and reported in terms of statistics – numbers of infections, numbers of patients in critical care and numbers of deaths. Lives were transformed into mathematical summaries. Graphs of the epidemic were drawn. And countries were compared for their rates of mortality.

      But those who died cannot and should not be summarised. They must not become lines on squared paper. They must not become mere rates used to argue differences between nations. Every death counts. A person who died in Wuhan is as important as one who died in New York. Our way of describing the impact of the pandemic erased the biographies of the dead. The science and politics of COVID-19 became exercises in radical dehumanisation.

      At press conference after press conference, government ministers and their medical and scientific advisors described the deaths of their neighbours as ‘unfortunate’. But these were not unfortunate deaths. They were not unlucky, inappropriate or even regrettable. Every death was evidence of systematic government misconduct – reckless acts of omission that constituted breaches in the duties of public office.

      This book is their story.

      I owe a debt of thanks to many people. To Ingrid, Isobel and Aleem, for a period of grace. To my colleagues at The Lancet who worked assiduously to ensure that research on COVID-19 was peer reviewed and published rapidly to support those responding on the frontlines of this pandemic. To health workers and scientists around the world who took time under immense pressure and difficulty to describe their extraordinary experiences. To John Thompson, for his constant encouragement. To Emma Longstaff, Helen Davies, Lucas Jones, Neil de Cort and Caroline Richmond from Polity, who helped to make the message real. And to three anonymous reviewers, whose comments and suggestions helped to sharpen the substance of this argument.

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