It’s Freedom Day in the UK—but COVID Is Not Going
Away Any Time Soon
JULY 19,
2021
Anthony
McDonnell
https://cgdev.org/blog/its-freedom-day-uk-covid-not-going-away-any-time-soon
The UK
government is removing almost all COVID-19 restrictions from England in what
the Prime Minister has as “Freedom Day”, but unfettered freedom does not exist.
Sometimes trade-offs are simple; few would argue against limiting people’s
freedom to murder and assault to give others freedom from violence. In the past
eighteen months, however, we had to get used to more complicated trade-offs,
and those with the lowest risk of COVID (like most children and young adults)
have made large sacrifices to protect the health and, ultimately, the freedom
of society’s most vulnerable.
COVID is
not going away any time soon. Despite many great medical advancements, humans
have only eradicated one infectious disease, smallpox. We now have effective
vaccines against COVID, and are continually improving treatments. However,
vaccines are not 100% effective. There are also some people who cannot get
vaccinated because of underlying health issues prevent vaccination, they are
too young, and those who do not want to be inoculated. So, some people will get
sick. Variants risk undermining recent success, already twice in the last eight
months, new variants have swept across the globe, and two more a continent.
With the vaccines being much less effective against the Delta variant (amongst
others), evidence from Israel suggests that the Pfizer vaccine’s efficacy
against symptomatic illness is only 64%, compared to 95% for the variants most
prevalent in 2020. Pfizer still reduces the severity of infection, so that
hospitalizations rates are down by 93% for those who have been vaccinated, but
a new more evasive variant could come along at any time.
As all
adults in the UK have been offered at least one vaccine shot, it is
understandable that politicians want to re-assess what freedoms to curtail in
order protect public health, and at some point we need a re-assessment (though
personally I’d rather this not happen whilst cases skyrocket).
There is no
right answer to the question of when to trade liberty against public health.
There are, however, at least four areas the government should look at for
long-term planning:
As new
variants pose the biggest risk to public health, they should be a primary
concern. The government should look to help other countries access vaccines. In
addition to alleviating huge global suffering, the less people who contract
this illness the less likely the virus is to mutate into a new variant, which
would come to the UK. There should be a greater investment in trial design so
that researchers can quickly test vaccines against new variants as they arise,
in case there is a variant that our current arsenal of vaccines does not work
against, new ones can be more quickly rolled out.
More should
be done to understand people’s preferences. The two previous attempts to open
society ended with strict lockdowns being imposed. Would most people rather
forgo some rights now if it reduced the risk of a future lockdown? And if so,
what freedoms do people want to forgo? And what is the appetite for risk? COVID
was not known about when this parliament was elected, so consulting with the
public directly would have greater legitimacy then only relying solely on MPs.
Public consultations are a standard part of UK policy process, the central
government held 379 consultations in 2019, it’s strange that in such an
important policy area there has not seen more formal consultation.
Economic
evaluations are also a standard part of the UK policy process but have not been
conducted on lockdowns to understand the trade-off. Understanding the social,
economic and health risks associated with different restrictions would reduce
the subjectivity of decisions. This could be used to create clear and
transparent rules of what should be open when. The government says that it is
willing to reimpose restrictions should the situation worsen, but we do now
know the criteria for restrictions, so the public and non-government experts
are excluded from these conversations around trade-offs.
We can open
the economy, whilst still protecting against risks.
The vast
majority of COVID transmission is through the air. This is less likely in well
ventilated buildings. The state should encourage, and possibly fund, better
ventilation in premises where people congregate. Even if COVID is not going to
be around in the long term (and it is), this would reduce the risk from other
respiratory illnesses, as well as from indoor pollution which often leads to
headaches, allergies, asthma, rashes and sinusitis.
Masks on
public transport and confined spaces are not likely to dampen the economic
recovery, and whilst annoying, their impact on people’s lives is far less than
lockdowns. Where masks are not practical, such as in restaurants, nightclubs
and gyms, rapid COVID tests or vaccine certificates could be used to reduce
risk. This would likely reduce public fear and increase demand for these
services.
The
requirement that people check into venues using the NHS test and trace app,
should not be scrapped.
To further
encourage people to get tested and then isolate if positive, people should be
paid to isolate when they contract COVID. This is particularly true for people
on low pay who cannot work from home, when the cost of isolation can be huge.
In a matter of weeks, the Treasury designed a furlough scheme to protect people
from being laid-off, why can they not design a similar scheme for those who are
sick?
Like with
influenza and the common cold, we will eventually have to learn to live with
COVID. In March 2020, the government had to make a series of quick decisions.
However, it is now eighteen months since COVID became a WHO illness of concern.
It’s time to prioritize transparency, consultation and long-term solutions.
Everyone
wants the world to return to normal, but we need to find a new normal that
maximizes freedom in a world where COVID will be ever present, rather than
trying to return to a pre-pandemic status quo.

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