🧵THREAD: a new wave has started in England (and likely about to or has in rest of UK)

TLDR: this will be 3rd wave within 6 months. Long covid an increasing issue - particularly in overexposed professions.

We don't need a UK ventilator challenge we need a ventilation one! 1/xx
5 weeks ago I said a new wave might be on its way in a 4-6 weeks.

I think it is now here and cases will go up from now. Let me show you why I think that..! 2/xx

After 6 months of Delta dominance, last weekend would have seen BA.2 lose its dominance - overtaken by a combination of BA.4, BA.5, BA.2.12.1 & BA.5.1 3/xx
BA.2.12.1, BA.4 and BA.5 are all at similar levels - BA.5.1 (a child of BA.5) is a new kid on the block but growing fast. It's now dominant in portugal.

Together BA.5/5.1 likely to win out...?

4/xx
This is NOT a surprise! I & others have been talking about this for weeks.

It's just that govt and others have lost any interest in doing anything about it. It's kind of frustrating to now see headlines "new wave on its way" - it's been on its way for weeks! 5/xx
Dominance doesn't necessarily mean a big new wave. But let's compare last 2 Omicron waves & ONS infection survey prevalence.

We can see that prevalence was at it lowest just at variant crossover in Feb. Looks like same thing happening now with small uptick in latest ONS. 6/xx
Good news is that prevalence is a lot lower than in Feb, so we are starting from a lower base. It is also possible that BA.2 wave will provide some protection and mean we get a smaller wave. But we will get a wave.

Esp as Jubilee weekend was just as crossover happened. 7/xx
Can we learn from other countries? Well, S.Africa had a much smaller BA.4/5 wave than its first Omicron wave.

Portugal currently has a BA.5/5.1 wave and it's as at least as big as its first Omicron wave. 8/xx
But different countries now have had very different pandemic trajectories and that means it is hard to know what will happen. We will be first big country I think to have BA.4/5 wave after big BA.2 wave. 9/xx
While vax gives similar protection against BA.4/5 than prev Omicron variants (@PeacockFlu ), almost everyone in UK is now several months out from their booster.

Over 75s should be well protected esp against severe disease from sring booster & (sadly) high BA.2 infections. 10/xx
We're not really doing any vaccinations now. 2/3 of pop have had a 3rd dose, but many remain unvaccinated - especially children. This could be an issue - esp in primary school kids - if BA4/5 get into schools this half term. 11/xx
We're also (still) going into this wave with differential protection. People in more deprived areas are much less likely to be vaccinated and boosted - and it's much starker in kids than adults. 12/xx
So infections. ONS infection survey shows that prevalence has stopped falling & might be rising across UK w/e 2 June. In England, ⬆️in teens, young adults & 35-69 yr olds.

Hosp admissions are going up in England (from lower base than Feb). The wave has (just) started. 13/xx
Deaths are still falling and it's much too early to see any signal in deaths from the latest wave. Hopefully eventual peak in deaths will be quite a bit lower than previous 2 Omicron waves, esp after spring booster in 75s+

14/xx
The new wave does mean there will be yet more people developing Long Covid. ONS data shows that Long Covid has *not* gone away in the age of Omicron, triple vax & prev infection. 15/xx
Highest long covid increases in Omicron have been in older adults. And we're seeing highest rates in social care, health care & teaching.
Just today, @TimesEducation reported that *over a third* of secondary schools struggling with long covid in teachers. 16/xx
If we are going to have waves every few months, we need to do something *sustainable* to reduce transmission. It's an airborne virus and spreads far more easily indoors and we need to address that.

Mask wearing is (unsurprisingly) dropping off - esp in younger adults. 17/xx
There has been increasing evidence coming out about how talking & singing give off more virus-containing aersols and how intense indoor exercise is also a big risk. 18/xx
But there are solutions! It's not only about masks - esp where they are impractical in restaurants/pubs/gyms... We have solutions! 19/xx
As these authors put it "A once-in-decades opportunity now exists to make sustained improvements to public and private indoor air quality" 20/xx
We spent billions on (often wasted!) PPE, on (successful) vaccines, millions on the UK ventilator challenge. We need that commitment now.

2 years later, let's have a UK Ventilation Challenge instead of the Ventilator Challenge. 21/21

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More from @chrischirp

Jun 1
🧵 Short Thread on state of Covid in England:

TLDR good news on new infections, admissions & deaths, bad news on Long Covid, unclear what will happen with latest variants (BA.4, BA.5 & BA.2.12.1 all on the up).

1/11
Firstly variants... We can see that dominant Omicron variant BA.2 that caused the March surge is falling back now.

But its decline seems to have slowed a bit - I thought it would have lost its dominance by now but that is likely at least a week or two away still. 2/11
3 Omicron subvariants on the up: BA.4/BA.5 (dominant in SA & Portugal) & BA.2.12.1 (dominant in US) - risen from 0.5% each to ~5% each in 3 weeks. Portugal & US seeing a new moderate surge in admissions. From US looks like BA.4/5 will win out over BA.2.12.1 eventually. 3/11
Read 12 tweets
May 27
🧵THREAD on why covid was and remains a more serious threat than flu for society.

Based mainly (but not only) on the most recent ONS report on deaths from Covid vs those from flu and/or pneumonia 1/7

ons.gov.uk/peoplepopulati…
People say "winter flu deaths" but they really mean deaths from either flu *or* pneumonia. Pneumonia covers a whole host of things - inc complications from flu but also many other infections.

So that's point number 1!

AND Covid was and remains more of a thread than both 2/7
The number of deaths due to Covid in 2020 and 2021 were far higher than annual number due to flu and/or pneumonia in every single year since 1918/19.

Particulary, flu/pnuemonia deaths lower this century due to more widespread flu vaccination. 3/7
Read 7 tweets
May 25
Browsing the Sue Gray report - the stuff going on in Dec 2020 when London was in Tier 3 was totally outrageous. Full on Christmas parties! This is pre vaccine and Alpha was surging in the SE and hospitals feeling the strain already 1/7
There were *two* raucous leaving parties that carried on till 1am on 17 December, which ended by joining up after midnight. Remember - "reasonably necessary for work" 2/7
On Fri 18th Dec the press office held a Xmas party with secret santa, alcohol and Quiz - was this the party Allegra Stratton was joking about & resigned over?

they sent the invite twice replacing "wine & cheese evening" with "meeting with wine & cheese".
How fucking funny. 3/7
Read 8 tweets
May 17
Quick thread on long covid & workforce & why it matters:

Today UK report lowest unemployment for 50 years - fair to say there is a labour shortage here right now.

But part of low unemployment is simply that we have *fewer* people to work cos of long term ill health 1/8
Long term sickness is higher than expected (350,000 people) and the Bank of England last week particularly highlighted Long Covid.

Women more likely to be not seeking work cos of sickness than men - consistent with Long Covid which affects women more often 2/8
The 350,000 people reported by the Bank of England is very similar to the 346,000 people ONS estimates as living with Long Covid that affects their day-to-day activities a lot. (it won't be a direct overlap though) 3/8
Read 10 tweets
May 16
We've never had less data in the face of rising new variants. 🧵

The European CDC designated Omicron variants BA.4 and BA.5 as variants of concern on Friday. They expect a new wave in Europe in the next 2 months. 1/4

ecdc.europa.eu/en/news-events…
In S Africa, where BA.4/5 are causing a wave right now, there is much less testing going on than previously. Admissions are going up, but are also lagged and have jumps (that may or may not be real).
SA *may* be close to peaking but v hard to tell... 2/4
BA.4/5 variants are growing fast here too (as is BA.2.12.2, causing a wave in US) but there is so little PCR testing happening now. This is the first new variant takeover where we are flying so blind.

We will only have limited warning this time. And who knows for next time. 3/4
Read 4 tweets
May 15
THREAD on why excess annual deaths are *not* a great *comparison* of impact of pandemic policy *between* countries.

TLDR: excess deaths have competing factors + depend on pandemic policy BUT ALSO popn health AND populatn age AND existing health systems etc. 1/11
Here's an illustrative example. Deaths in an "average" pre-pandemic year ("baseline deaths") will be a combination of deaths from (non-infectious) cancer, heart disease, diabetes; flu & pneumonia (and other infectious diseases); everything else. 2/11
How deaths are split among these causes, and how many deaths per population, are different for each country! E.g. depends on population health (& inequalities), population age, different levels of some diseases (e.g. malaria; flu); how well the health system functions etc 3/11
Read 12 tweets

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