I was puzzled by Jonathan Van Tan’s comment that we don’t know whether the Pfizer/BioNTech vaccine will prevent transmission of Covid-19 even if - as claimed - it has 90% efficacy in preventing us becoming ill. So I asked @michaelgove’s favourite people, the experts. What they...
explained was that some vaccines prevent us becoming ill with a virus but don’t prevent us having the virus and being able to infect others. This is how one put it: “if a vaccine is effective, the remaining question is ‘what type of efficacy?’ Does the vaccine...
protect against being infected (AND being sick of course), or only against being sick, or even possibly only against being seriously sick (that is not being hospitalised)? A vaccine that protects people against symptoms may not be able to also protect them from carrying...
the virus. In such cases, people may still be contagious. Ideally the vaccine would ‘sterilise’ the patient, that is it would eliminate completely the virus from their respiratory tract. That said a vaccine that only protects against symptoms or even simply...
against hospitalisation would still be useful. Detailed analyses of the clinical trial results will address these questions”. This distinction between a vaccine that totally sterilises us and one that in effect turns us into asymptomatic sufferers (sufferers without...
symptoms) really matters. Because if the Covid-19 vaccine neutralises symptoms but does not eliminate infections, Covid-19 will be with us probably forever, like ‘flu. It won’t be as bad as it is now, but it won’t be eliminated altogether. And that will have significant...
long term social, cultural and economic implications. To be clear, most of us would presumably take any kind of vaccine that gave some sort of protection. So the Pfizer/BioNTech breakthrough is important. We just don’t know yet quite how important.
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Another striking characteristic of today’s @bankofengland projections is that UK GDP, or national income, is set to shrink by 11% for the whole of 2020, a record. We are losing more than one in every ten pounds of our income, one of the worst performances in the world: the...
fall in US GDP is forecast at “just” 3.75%, the euro-area shrinkage is 6.75% and the global decline is projected at 5.25%. Given that the virus is the same virus everywhere, it is difficult to argue that the UK’s policy response to it has been...
economically optimal, even adjusting for the UK’s disproportionate reliance on services that thrive on the kind of human contact that the virus has made dangerous. It is not over till it is over, but the combination of excess deaths and excessive economic loss in...
These are the measures to be announced by the PM at 5, as I understand it. They will last 2 December. And they are, In effect, a new “Tier 4” that will be imposed for a month initially to the whole of England. 1) All pubs and restaurants to close, though takeaways...
and deliveries will be permitted. 2) All non-essential retail to close, though supermarkets won't have to follow the Welsh example of fencing off non-essential goods. 3) There will be no mixing of people inside homes, except for childcare and other forms of support...
3) Manufacturing and construction will be encouraged to keep going. 4) Outbound international travel will be banned, except for work. 5) Travel within the UK will be discouraged, except for work. 6) Overnight stays away from home will be allowed only for work purposes...
The chancellor @RishiSunak insists he is not blocking the provision of free school meals over the holidays including Christmas. What is striking is that his billionaire father-in-law NR Narayan Murthy has spoken of “our responsibility to ensure every kid is fed properly”...
And more than that, Murthy is a supporter of an important Indian charity Akshaya Patra, which works to “end classroom poverty in India” - as is his wife Sudha, Sunak’s mother-in-law, who “actively facilitates the mid-day meal programme” (see attached). The reason I...
mention this is that the impressive Indian charity has just opened a kitchen in Watford and has just started delivering free meals to a school in North London (see @guardiantheguardian.com/education/2020…). In other words a charity backed by Sunak’s family is helping...
I have been banging on about how the number of people dying right now of #COVID19 is much higher than it should be, if @CMO_England and @uksciencechief are right that the infection fatality rate (IFR) has fallen significantly because of improvements in care and treatment...
The attached chart show shows this worrying rise in the mortality rate very clearly. It plots reported daily coronavirus deaths in England as a proportion of daily infections 23 days earlier, as per the @ONS survey. And as you can see, a significant fall in the infection...
fatality rate from July to September has since gone into serious reverse. The irony here is that when Vallance warned about the second wave all those weeks ago, he seems to have overstated the likely growth in infections while being right about deaths - though...
It is extraordinary that #Covid19 has turned @BorisJohnson into more Castro than Castro. By the time the remade Job Support Scheme, the Self-employed grant and the business grants terminate at the end of March, we will have experienced a whole year of an economy more...
socialised - more socialist - than at any point in British history. Countless millions of workers and business owners will have had their income subsidised by @RishiSunak and the Treasury by between 40% and 80% for all or part of the year. It is a bail out unprecedented...
in peacetime, and is not unlike the socialisation and collective endeavour of a world war. It will redefine us as a nation, and not just because the associated increase in the nation’s debt of well over £300bn won’t be repaid in most of our lifetimes. The more important...
Who was wrong not to close a deal over a gap of £5m - Boris Johnson or Andy Burnham? The Treasury signed off a £55m package to support businesses and employees hurt by the Tier 3 closures. Burnham said he would accept £65m. The PM personally offered Burnham a compromise...
of £60m on the basis it would not undermine support he had given to Lancs and Liverpool. Burnham argued he had already compromised. Talks collapsed. Downing St tells me what matters now is imposing the Tier 3 restrictions - and insists it will take steps to limit the hurt...
to businesses and employees who can no longer work. But it won't say the £60m package is still there. In the meantime, most of the rest of the country probably cannot understand why central and local governments cannot agree on a decision about saving lives...