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In a recent and controversial First Opinion, epidemiologist and statistician John Ioannidis argues that we lack good data on many aspects of the Covid-19 epidemic, and seems to suggest that we should not take drastic actions to curtail the spread of the virus until the data are more certain.

He is absolutely right on the first point. The U.S. has done fewer tests per capita so far than almost any rich country in the world. And many critical details of the epidemiology — including the absolute number of cases, the role of children in transmission, the role of presymptomatic transmission, and the risk of dying from infection with SARS-CoV-2 — remain uncertain.

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On the second point, I would say that his article did what contrarian writing should do: started a discussion. We spoke by phone on Tuesday, not long after his article appeared, and found that we had more in common than it appeared when I first read it.

So without trying to characterize Ioannidis’ view, I will state a strongly held view of my own: We know enough to act; indeed, there is an imperative to act strongly and swiftly. It is true that we can’t be sure either how many infections there have been in any population or the risk of needing intensive care or the case fatality rate. These uncertainties are two sides of the same coin. Nonetheless, two things are clear.

First, the number of severe cases — the product of these two unknowns — becomes fearsome in country after country if the infection is allowed to spread. In Italy, coffins of Covid-19 victims are accumulating in churches that have stopped holding funerals. In Wuhan, at the peak of the epidemic there, critical cases were so numerous that, if scaled up to the size of the U.S. population, they would have filled every intensive care bed in this country.

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That is what happens when a community waits until crisis hits to try to slow transmission. Intensive care demand lags new infections by about three weeks because it takes that long for a newly infected person to get critically ill. So acting before the crisis hits — as was done in some Chinese cities outside Wuhan, and in some of the small towns in Northern Italy — is essential to prevent a health system overload.

Second, if we don’t apply control measures, the number of cases will keep going up exponentially beyond the already fearsome numbers we have seen. Scientists have estimated that the basic reproductive number of this virus is around 2. That means without control, case numbers will double, then quadruple, then be eight times as big, and so on, doubling with each “generation” of cases.

To stop an epidemic like that permanently, nearly half the population must be immune. While the exact number of people infected in each population is unknown, current estimates are that for every symptomatic case there is about one asymptomatic or very mild case.

In populations with good ascertainment of symptomatic cases, the number of infections is perhaps double what is observed (in the U.S., where testing is limited, true cases are a much higher multiple of reported cases). In well-tested countries, we can be nearly certain that no population has reached anywhere near half of its people infected. That means that when each country lets up on control measures, transmission will increase and the number of cases will grow again.

It is crucial to emphasize that a pandemic like this does not dissipate on its own, as Ioannidis suggested as a possibility. Severe acute respiratory syndrome (SARS) in 2003 was hammered into submission by intense public health measures in many places, which were effective because transmission was mainly from very sick people. Middle East respiratory syndrome (MERS), which emerged in 2012, is a weakly transmissible infection that causes outbreaks in hospitals, but is otherwise much less contagious than Covid-19.

There are two options for Covid-19 at the moment: long-term social distancing or overwhelmed health care systems. That is the depressing conclusion many epidemiologists have been emphasizing for weeks, and which was detailed in an analysis released this week by the Imperial College London.

Ioannidis is right that the prospect of intense social distancing for months or years is one that can hardly be imagined, let alone enacted. The alternative of letting the infection spread uncontrolled is equally unimaginable. We certainly need more data. Even more than that, we need a breakthrough to make effective treatments, vaccines, or other preventive measures available at scale.

Waiting and hoping for a miracle as health systems are overrun by Covid-19 is not an option. For the short term there is no choice but to use the time we are buying with social distancing to mobilize a massive political, economic, and societal effort to find new ways to cope with this virus.

Marc Lipsitch, D.Phil., is professor of epidemiology at the Harvard T.H. Chan School of Public Health and director of Harvard’s Center for Communicable Disease Dynamics.

  • This NIH link takes you to a study that shows that we need to employ real science and not bend to special commercial interests that deny basic facts that lead to poor governance that then in turn are the root cause of pandemics. – This site shows a litany of hard facts with 177 verifiable sources that show how these pandemics could be avoided with global risk management that stops extremely bad practices in the farming, in raising of animals for food, in public health, and many other areas > https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/books/NBK525302/ WE NEED political leaders world-wide need to proactively take on interests that fail to implement BEST PRACTICE for food, health and environmental safety. Why did it take so long to cancel large and frivolous events like Florida’s “Spring Break” when many other states and organizations canceled Saint Patrick’s Day and Greek Independence Day parades proactively? This one error could lead to intensifying the crisis for no go reason. I am 60++ years old and I went to college and was an athlete but NEVER did Spring Break. It is a trivial nonessential that our poor governance could not deal with like we did with other disease spreading events. Finally, we need to implement more permanent mandatory measures globally so that we do not keep going from one pandemic to another. The issue is basically a moral choice where we need to say enough is enough, less is more, and focus resources on truly critical priorities rather than making entertaining ourselves such a priority. Spiritual communities are giving up in person worship services while people are partying at the beach! News, information sharing, and governance needs to become more dispassionate and less emotional. Plain common sense tells you that making well through out rational choices will in the long run guarantee more freedom and a better quality of life than yielding to the emotionalism of the primitive part of our human brains.

  • It seems that the author is creating a false choice, either this or that. ‘There are two options for Covid-19 at the moment: long-term social distancing or overwhelmed health care systems. ‘ Why aren’t there more discussions about how to limit the spread to those most at risk and maintain some semblance of life, albeit with caution, and much greater testing and hygiene? Why not quarantine those most at risk, guide everyone else to be extra careful and those who have had the virus and recovered go back to full activity. This will surely limit the spread, damage and allow our society moderately productively to go on while we learn more how to test, diagnose and treat?

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