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Coronavirus: We’re in need of objective facts, not ideology

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It’s no surprise that the COVID-19 pandemic is rattling a few brains.

Pity the economic commentators who have spent the last twenty years divining political wisdom based on excruciatingly minuscule budget surpluses or deficits and then watching the Commonwealth rack up $184 billion and counting in debt in the space of a couple of weeks.

Feel sorrow for the ideologically obsessed who praised the federal government’s election on small government principles and enthusiastic encouragement for entrepreneurship and private enterprise turn almost in a heartbeat to a large, imposing government that has to nurse the population along financially and emotionally.

Perhaps that’s why Andrew Bolt wrote a column on Monday urging the country back to work in two weeks. He based his claim on declining rates of recorded cases of COVID-19 and he is right about that. Over the weekend recorded cases were in decline. This remains cause for optimism.

He’s not on his own. There are many members of the commentariat of the view that the fit and well should return to work as soon as possible. I actually wish they were right but a few days’ worth of data is no basis for calling an end to a pandemic.

Recorded cases of COVID-19 have doubled in New South Wales since March 25. Victoria showed a decline in recorded cases yesterday but spiked upwards today. The numbers remain small and manageable at this point.

We all have access to general data on COVID-19 infection, transmission rates, death rates, demographic breakdowns. The truly unique aspect of this pandemic is we can see the numbers roll out in real time.

But there is a great gaping hole in the data, something even epidemiologists and immunologists can only guess at.

In Australia, a person may only be tested if they have returned from overseas, been in direct contact with someone who has, is a health care worker, has developed a community acquired form of pneumonia without an established cause, or has had direct contact with an infected person and presents with COVID-19-type symptoms.

The government tells us that we have one of the highest rates of testing in the world and they’re right but only the latter two categories can provide some indication on human to human transmission, perhaps more properly described as community transmission.

We simply don’t have enough data to know where we’re at on this most crucial piece of the puzzle. It may be quite low, but we can’t be sure. Reopening businesses without a proper understanding of the degree of community infection would be reckless and downright dangerous.

Australia’s death rate – a measure of recorded cases divided by deaths as of today is at 0.41 per cent. Relative to the world, it’s almost as good as it gets but it is climbing slowly.

The US is at two per cent and rising. Spain is at 8.82 per cent and France 6.75. All are in the ascendant. Germany, which has a similarly high infection rate to its European neighbours has a death rate at 1.07 per cent but again it is climbing.

Italy’s death rate is at a staggering 11.74 per cent and shows no sign of slowing down.

To date Italy is the best example we have of what happens in a country where the threshold between patients requiring hospital treatment and the capacity of emergency medical response to provide it is crossed.

Australia’s experience of COVID-19 is objectively different to that of Italy but there are differences and similarities that are worthy of note.

Italy first identified two travellers from China as having COVID-19 on January 25. It closed flights from China on January 29; two days before the US and four days before Australia’s shutdown.

There are certain demographics that may have contributed to the extent of the outbreak in Italy. Italy has the second highest ageing population in the world. It has a high smoking rate at 28 per cent of the population above the age of 15. But Japan holds the ageing population title and has a similarly high smoking rate and has recorded just 1,953 cases of COVID-19 and only 56 deaths.

By comparison, 15 per cent of Australians are 65 years of age or older. Australia’s smoking rate is half that of Italy’s.

Population density in Italy, especially in the north is high but again not as high as Japan. Milan has a population density of 7,200 people per square kilometre. Ultimo, in inner Sydney has 19,461 people per square kilometre.

In 2000, Italy’s public health system, Servizio Sanitaro Nazionale, a model not unlike Medicare or the UK’s NHS, was considered one of the best in the world. But austerity measures driven by the economic calamity of the Global Financial Crisis, have meant public health spending has been slashed with Italians having to fund the health system through co-payments running at 23.5 per cent of total expenditure. Australians contribute around 17 per cent.

What this means is a lot of people, particularly in lower socio-economic strata have an almost decade-long history of receiving little or no medical care. Many may be in poor health and thus more susceptible to serious illness and death from COVID-19 infection. Clearly those conditions prevail more in Italy than here.

The remaining contributing factor is the hot issue of the pandemic – the degree and efficacy of testing. In Italy, COVID-19 hit hard and early but fundamentally the testing criteria is the same as Australia’s.

Last month the small town of Vo, near Venice, tested all of its 3000 residents for COVID-19. With or without symptoms, whether they’d been overseas or stayed at home, everyone had the swabs. Eighty-nine people tested positive. They were isolated and provided with medical treatment where necessary. The remaining population was tested again. Six people tested positive. They were isolated. The third round of testing showed no COVID-19 infection. No one died because medical intervention came early. The town went from a hotbed of infection to zero in the space of a Boltian fortnight.

Even if it could be done across a much larger population, it is too late for Italy. While a roll out of universal testing for COVID-19 would be a logistical nightmare in Australia if it is best practice you’re after, it stands as the ideal, bearing in mind testing can only buy time before a vaccine or preventive treatments are established.

The early infection commenced from people who had travelled to northern Italy by air, essentially from China. More infection has occurred in Australia from Europe or the US than came from China. We are at different stages of the pandemic on the basis of transmission alone.

In Italy, 85.65 per cent of those who have died were over 70. More than half of patients who were placed on respirators died. In some hospitals it was as high as 80 per cent.

People who travelled overseas either for holidays or for business purposes or indeed by stepping onto the gangplank of a cruise liner were on the front line of infection.

Behind them on the next line are the elderly and what’s often dismissively referred to as the infirm as if a large chunk of the Australian population is sitting around in wheelchairs spitting into cups in consumption wards.

I can’t tell you what percentage of the population present with high blood pressure, cancer, asthma, is immunosuppressed or compromised, takes tablets for rheumatoid arthritis, or blood thinners for stroke prevention, has diabetes, kidney or liver disease, blood disorders, has fallen pregnant in the previous three months or suffers a range of maladies both pervasive or obscure but on a back of the envelope calculation and combined with the 70 plus age group in, we’d have to be looking at something approaching half the population of the country.

The concept of ‘ring-fencing’ millions of people on the basis of age and/or medical conditions only known by those people and their medicos is unworkable. Let’s start with how the state might enforce it. Any ideas? Anyone? Hello?

While COVID-19 continues to threaten populations, ideology needs to be placed in an induced coma. It is of no utility at present. The very idea of labelling the Morrison government socialist two months ago would have been laughable. It would be accurate now, but it’s not terribly helpful.

To be sure, the back to work crew like Bolt are not cold-hearted robots sitting in front of their adding machines punching in numbers based on the great military euphemisms of our time – collateral damage and megadeaths.

But they are facing a global crisis they’re struggling to comprehend. The response to the COVID-19 pandemic cannot be ideologically based not least of all because the virus itself has no concept of it.

There’s nothing wrong with ideology per se but in the midst of a pandemic, it is a poor substitute for objective fact and when inveigled on what is unknown the consequences can be catastrophic.

This column was first published in The Australian on 1 April, 2020

106 Comments

  • Razor says:

    Interesting days ahead JTI. Our measures seem to have had an impact but it’s early days. Vaccination is 15mths away, if at all, and despite the kerfuffle a cure seems far fetched. I think as things progress significant public disorder is a strong possibility. I also think our society will change dramatically, in some ways for the better. I think there is a strong argument to get our manufacturing industries back. Cheap energy would be a great way to start. The cruise industry is dead and buried, globalisation is on life support and the EU is on the track to oblivion. The great green dream is over as western economies will need to put industry on steroids to pay the bills. Anyway just some thoughts. I hope all on here are looking after themselves in this brave new world.

    • Jack The Insider says:

      Dunno about the long term consequences, Razor. Lots of speculation. But it is difficult to see a return to business as usual. China’s economic power will almost certainly rise in the aftermath and the decline of the US will be accelerated. Australia’s numbers are pretty good thus far. We might get lucky. There are some new processes in place – antibody testing great swathes of the population to determine levels of immunity that might get the nation or big chunks of it back to work a little earlier.

  • Wissendorf says:

    Article in Quora (I’m unsure of the reliability of that outlet) has presented information to suggest this virus doesn’t remain in the body long enough to acquire immunity. Cases of re-infection have been reported. How was 14 days deduced to be an adequate time for self isolation? I can’t find any info about that.

    Meanwhile, Australia’s foremost news outlet has been down to Centrelink and have uncovered another crisis unfolding.
    https://www.betootaadvocate.com/advocate-in-focus/thousands-of-lawyers-line-up-outside-centrelink-as-nrl-competition-suspended/

  • Henry Donald J Blofeld says:

    I note, Mr Insider, we no longer have to do the CNTRL-F5 as before to refresh the Blog, that cleverly worked out by the astute JackSprat saved us all some time ago.

    I think JackSprat is back?

  • Henry Donald J Blofeld says:

    The full extent of the Federal Governments Stimulus Spending to date revealed here in an ABC article with Graph. Lord knows how long b4 we ever wipe this Debt out, many saying it will be Generational, Mr Insider. More Stimulus Spending to come methinks.

    https://tinyurl.com/tp76st2

    • Carl on the Coast says:

      Yeah, cheers Wiss. I skimmed the references you offered and one in particular seemed most relevant to the subject at hand. It was an ethics paper by prof Deb Cao. To summarise, the paper posited that “the exploitation of wildlife in China as a food source ( in this instance read bats)* is linked to the underlying belief in Chinese culture that all animals are simply instruments for human benefit.”

      So, my question is, if the Chinese have been chowing down on bat wing soup for millennia why hasn’t a deadly virus (as the one we are currently experiencing) emerged before now.

      I smell a rat.

      *my words in brackets

  • Dismayed says:

    Bella may interested?
    https://www.greenpeace.org.au/news/nsw-federal-governments-strip-back-koala-protection-despite-bushfire-devastation/
    Saturday 4 April 2020 – The Federal Government has walked away from its responsibility to protect nationally listed threatened species like the koala, in a new bilateral agreement between the Commonwealth and the State of NSW today.
    “The agreement sees the Federal Government abandon its responsibility to protect threatened species and ecological communities that cross state borders, making it easier for new and expanded coal and gas projects to damage landscapes at risk of extinction.”
    Also worth noting Land clearing has increased 1300% under the NSW coalition. Apologies about the extra stuff after the link.

    • Bella says:

      Thank-you for caring Dismayed. Currently we have seen an ‘all bets are off’ approach by this government to unethically nor legally follow many hard-won longstanding environmental protections, because it’s hidden under blanket coverage of this pandemic. As for our koalas
      the full impact on many threatened species of our wildlife is not fully realised even now but it’s extreme & trees are critical to their comeback.
      I’ll pull up here mate lest my burning disgust with politicians overrides my manners.
      Hey Dismayed nice to see you.

    • Henry Donald J Blofeld says:

      Massive hit song for Johnny Cash, Dismayed. We saw Johnny live in 1971 when he toured Australia. He had his wife with him, June Carter and ELVIS Guitarist from the Sun Record days, Carl Perkins.

      Cheers, stay healthy and safe as we

  • Carl on the Coast says:

    The prospect of the spread of COVID-19 resulting in causalities similar to those of the Spanish flu is perhaps debatable. Given that less than fifty million deaths occur globally each year from communicable and non communicable diseases, the prospect of the present contagion more than eclipsing that number is indeed spooky.

    At the risk of breaching your “ideology” embargo Jack, may I say that we should not be too coy about remembering where and how the present contagion originated. The ‘where’ is simple – China. The ‘how’ not so conclusive. I don’t believe any of the world’s powers, including China, are immune from exploring various ways and means in their considerations of the overthrow of ruling ideologies and international order.

    To think otherwise would be batty.

    • Henry Donald J Blofeld says:

      I say Carl, let me get your “drift”, are you suggesting Communist China may have been up to some “skullduggery” re this Virus?

      Our esteemed Blogger, Mr Baptiste, who is yet to make a Grand Appearance, would be mortified.

      Stay safe my friend, our wonderful QLD Sun will “bleach” those dastardly Corona Cells. P.S. Premier Anastasia was yesterday telling us we may have to go into a 6 Month Lockdown, that would take us right up to State Election time, funnily enough.

      • Carl on the Coast says:

        Cheers HB, trust you’re coping with whatever restrictions AP has applied.

        Re my alleged “drift”, I think I’ll let you draw your own conclusions. Suffice to say the so called “wet markets”, by all accounts, are still open for business.

        Re our old mate JB, perhaps he’s visiting his old mate Kimmie in the DPRK and doesn’t have the wherewithal to get home. Hope he’s okay, eh.

      • John L says:

        And you would vote for the party that said “No more lock downs”

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