Coronavirus: Lockdowns in Europe saved millions
of lives
By James
Gallagher
Health and
science correspondent
8 June 2020
/ BBC
Lockdowns
have saved more than three million lives from coronavirus in Europe, a study
estimates.
The team at
Imperial College London said the "death toll would have been huge"
without lockdown.
But they
warned that only a small proportion of people had been infected and we were
still only "at the beginning of the pandemic".
Another
study argued global lockdowns had "saved more lives, in a shorter period
of time, than ever before".
The
Imperial study assessed the impact of restrictions in 11 European countries -
Austria, Belgium, Denmark, France, Germany, Italy, Norway, Spain, Sweden,
Switzerland and the UK - up to the beginning of May.
By that
time, around 130,000 people had died from coronavirus in those countries.
The
researchers used disease modelling to predict how many deaths there would have
been if lockdown had not happened. And the work comes from the same group that
guided the UK's decision to go into lockdown.
UK changes course amid death toll fears
They
estimated 3.2 million people would have died by 4 May if not for measures such
as closing businesses and telling people to stay at home.
That meant
lockdown saved around 3.1 million lives, including 470,000 in the UK, 690,000
in France and 630,000 in Italy, the report in the journal Nature shows.
"Lockdown
averted millions of deaths, those deaths would have been a tragedy," said
Dr Seth Flaxman, from Imperial.
They assume
nobody would have changed their behaviour in response to the Covid threat
without a lockdown - and that hospitals would not be overwhelmed resulting in a
surge in deaths, which nearly happened in some countries.
The study
also does not take into account the health consequences of lockdowns that may
take years to fully uncover.
Only the beginning?
The model
also predicted that the outbreak would be nearly over by now without lockdown,
as so many people would have been infected.
More than
seven in 10 people in the UK would have had Covid, leading to herd immunity and
the virus no longer spreading.
Instead,
the researchers estimate that up to 15 million people across Europe had been
infected by the beginning of May.
The
researchers say at most, 4% of the population in those countries had been
infected.
"Claims
this is all over can be firmly rejected. We are only at the beginning of this
pandemic," said Dr Flaxman.
And it
means that as lockdowns start to lift, there is the risk the virus could start
to spread again.
"There
is a very real risk if mobility goes back up there could be a second wave coming
reasonably soon, in the next month or two," said Dr Samir Bhatt.
Meanwhile,
a separate study by University of California, Berkeley, analysed the impact of
lockdowns in China, South Korea, Iran, France and the US.
Their
report, also in Nature, says lockdown prevented 530 million infections in those
countries.
Just before
lockdowns were introduced, they said cases were doubling every two days.
Dr Solomon
Hsiang, one of the researchers, said coronavirus had been a "real human
tragedy" but the global action to stop the spread of the virus had
"saved more lives, in a shorter period of time, than ever before".


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