Dr Dan Goyal Profile picture
Dec 5 43 tweets 9 min read Twitter logo Read on Twitter
Before Johnson gives his evidence we should consider a few things:

1. Just how bad was the UK pandemic response?
2. How much could Johnson have affected this?
3. What was Johnson’s intent?
4. Was there any overt maleficence?

Thread 1/n (buckle-up!)
1. How did the UK perform?
Badly. For many in the wider public, it will be quite obvious that the UK did very badly indeed. But for those who are still able to deny what they see, let's poke this a bit
There are a few considerations when examining how well a country did during the pandemic:

Firstly, there is how well a country was expected to do - its underlying capability.

Second, the direct outcomes - number of cases, Covid deaths, indirect deaths, etc...
Thirdly, the cost of achieving those outcomes - days in lockdown, loss of livelihoods, education, mental health, economic impact, cost of interventions - tests, PPE, furlough, etc..

Overall, did we live up to expectations and did the results justify the costs?
We know from the testimony of Hancock, Harries, etc.. that the UK was expected to do very well. The Global Health Security Index rated the UK at number 2 in 2019. In a large part, this relates to the NHS infrastructure and public health expertise in the UK.
And this is probably fair in that if the pandemic had hit in 2007 when the influenza plan was first designed we probably would have done quite well. This was before public health funding was decimated and Brexit had not derailed pandemic preparedness work.
This was covered in Module 1 - austerity, failure to grow the NHS, massive cuts to public health funding, a failure to update pandemic plans, no social care preparation, and all depts being consumed with “what ifs” due to Brexit materially hampered our pandemic response.
So what was our capability?
In 2009, it was really quite good (still too few doctors, nurses and beds). By 2020 our capability was still OK, but it seems inconceivable that we would have ever made it into an excellent response based on the state of public services at that time.
We must also appreciate that there are degrees of good and bad responses. For example, we could look at Japan, Taiwan, South Korea or New Zealand - very few deaths with relatively limited restrictions to life or the economy. This would be deemed an excellent response.
Then there are the countries that achieved a good response - Norway, Singapore, Iceland, Australia, … - where death and economic harm were certainly minimised.
Others achieved an average response - France, Germany, Canada, - where both the virus and the measures needed to control them had substantial adverse effects throughout the country and for a prolonged period, but lives lost were somewhat minimised.
Then there are the countries that had a relatively poor response. These are countries where deaths soared despite extensive social restrictions. That is, despite huge social disruption the death rate was very high - Belgium, Italy and Spain are probably in this group.
The final group are the catastrophic pandemic responses. This is where substantial costs (financial and social) did not lead to a significant reduction in death and disability. The U.S. and Brazil are likely to feature here.

But where does the UK fit?
Here we will use Our World in Data which is run by Johns Hopkins University. It isn’t perfect but is pretty good.

There is some debate about the data but it is unlikely to change the broad picture.
Deaths
The UK is number 1 in terms of Covid Deaths of the countries chosen. There is debate about categorising deaths but even the most generous interpretation would still see the UK remaining at the top of this chart. Image
In terms of overall deaths (direct and indirect), the UK is up there with Brazil, the US, and Italy. Image
To then understand how “good” a response this is we must look at what was needed to achieve these numbers - lockdowns, tests, costs, economic impact. How much effort did we put in or sacrifices did we make to achieve this response?
In terms of national lockdowns, the UK was again right up at the top of the chart. Some countries are difficult to compare, particularly the large ones - US, Canada, Russia, China and Australia. Most of these had significant local lockdowns.

[Source: Statisca/Wiki] Image
For comparison, look at France which had 140 days in lockdown whereas the UK had around 220 days. Japan - similar in some ways - had no lockdowns at all. New Zealand only had 70 days. So despite much more time in lockdown than in France, we had double the deaths!
Next, look at how much the UK spent on testing…Our testing capacity was delayed - indeed community testing was stopped entirely on 12th March. But when it came back online (with private contractors) we tested much more than comparative nations. Image
It’s a legitimate question: why did we test so much and yet achieve so little? Double the number of tests than France, yet double the deaths too!

The same goes for PPE. Again, we were delayed in getting PPE to frontline staff but we ended up spending an incredible amount on it.
The data here is not as clear cut - contracts aren’t always in the public domain. But there are some useful comparisons. Here is a map of PPE expenditure in Europe. Apparently, at this point the EU had spent 20b Euros, and of that, the UK spent 10b Euros
occrp.org/en/coronavirus…
Image
Indeed, we burnt more of our first year’s supply of PPE (£4b) than all the hospitals in the US used over two years of the pandemic ($3b). Eye-watering levels of expenditure…but for what gain?
The govt spent a lot of money, but did it spend it on the right things? According to the IMF, by July 2021, France had spent around £30b on health (including tests, PPE, T&T) and Germany around £60b. At the same time, the UK had spent £156b on health!

imf.org/en/Topics/imf-…
But, oddly, we spent less supporting people during Covid. Germany spent around £400b versus the UK’s £180b. France spent about the same as the UK (but of course France spent £120b less on health).

Click on replies for the continuation on thread...
All this spending on health interventions with very little to show. Remember, we didn’t see an increase in the size of the NHS…indeed, it shrank during the pandemic. Bed capacity fell 8%. So what was this money actually for?
It wasn’t to protect the economy. We did far worse than other G7 countries. Here is an FT graph showing indexed Real GDP through the last 3 years. The grey lines are the other G7 countries. Image
In terms of expenditure, we spent a lot on tests, test & trace, and PPE, but very little on actual healthcare provision and only a modest amount on supporting people during the pandemic. Odd, for a govt not containing a virus to spend so much on such things.
To sum up costs, we spent a colossal amount on tests, test and trace, PPE, and yet we had the highest number of Covid deaths, the longest lockdowns, and the poorest economic performance. All from a country that should have had one of the best responses in the world.
I think it is fair to say that the UK ended up in the catastrophic pandemic response category. Indeed, the UK has a reasonable shout at having the “worst pandemic response”. The States did very badly but did protect their economy to some degree. Arguably, Brazil was worse.
2. Could Johnson have affected this?
Undoubtedly the answer is yes! The initial delay was really quite something. And certainly, by the 14th March that decision rested solely with Johnson. Watch how late the UK is in the FT graphic
3. And what was his intent?
While Johnson is likely to paint a picture of scientific uncertainty and wrestling with tough decisions, there is evidence that Johnson formed a position very early on and never wavered from it.
I return to this remarkable speech given by him in Greenwich on the 3rd of Feb. It is truly extraordinary in that he hadn’t even been briefed by his scientists yet. Indeed, there was still uncertainty about whether it would be a sustained global pandemic.
Yet, Johnson clearly seems to know that it will be a monumental pandemic and that there will be a need to restrict people’s activities and the economy. He clearly states the UK will be different and keep the economy open.
This formed the basis of what became known as the natural herd immunity strategy. Sadly some advisers got onboard with it. But had Johnson’s position been ‘let's get on top of this and save as many lives as possible’ there is no doubt his advisers would have backed him.
And there is no evidence this changed throughout the pandemic. At each critical juncture, Johnson delayed. Had lessons been learned he would have realised we need to act hard and fast to limit both death and the length of lockdowns. He did the opposite.
I think Johnson would find it hard to argue against the allegation that he wanted the infection to spread as quickly as possible, probably so the UK could emerge from the pandemic sooner. Certainly from mid-March this was against all official advice!
So then, to the final question. 4. Was there actual maleficence? That is, was there an intent that went beyond saving lives or even saving the economy? Some have suggested that the death of the older and more vulnerable groups suited Johnson’s ideology...
Others have suggested that this was disaster capitalism. That there was no financial benefit (individual financial benefit) in suppressing or containing the virus, and in fact, billions were made in profits by Johnson’s allies from the poorly controlled pandemic.
The reality, it is unlikely the Inquiry will probe such intentions. It may reveal the evidence from which we can discern his intentions throughout the pandemic, but it seems unlikely to achieve an admission that Johnson was pursuing a herd immunity strategy throughout.
To summarise, we were expected to do well, we spent a lot of money, and we had one of the longest lockdowns in the world, yet we still had one of the highest Covid-19 death tallies and excess death tolls.
Johnson set his position of mass infection early and the Cabinet and many of his advisers fell behind this. Undoubtedly, had Johnson decided to focus on saving lives then we would have done far, far better.
It is not entirely on Johnson. As Module 1 demarcated clearly, austerity and Brexit had a significant impact on our resilience and almost certainly would have prevented an excellent response. Johnson did have the resources to achieve a good response. He failed.

END.

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More from @danielgoyal

Dec 2
Johnson will take the view that there was uncertainty and evidence was changing and advice was changing…better to be seen as indecisive than reckless.

But I caution anyone willing to take the dithering PM as a defence to think carefully

He set his stall out very early…
1/11
On 3rd of Feb Johnson gave his infamous speech at Greenwich.

Remember he hadn’t even been briefed by his CMO at this point.

Yet he was very clear that:

a) the pandemic was coming
b) it would necessitate significant restrictions
c) and it would bad enough to affect the economy
He states clearly he won’t impose restrictions and will be the outlier internationally in that the U.K. will be the Superman of the world and move to keep the economy open.

Where this position came from - who was advising him? - remains unclear.
Read 11 tweets
Dec 1
I wonder whether Johnson and Hancock have made a pact.

Hancock seemed to go to some length to, as far as possible, insulate Johnson.

The strategy seems to be…

1/6
Hancock was leading the charge Jan to early March - there is good evidence he did make efforts. And they will continue to blame scientists for any delays

Then from 2nd March, Hancock says Johnson was in charge…

2/6
Johnson will say he was following advice from the scientists and any other “inconvenient” advice was “shielded” from him by No 10 (i.e. Cummings).

Johnson will go on to say how decisions were made without his knowledge (by Cummings during his special morning meetings)

3/6
Read 6 tweets
Dec 1
Before Hancock's final evidence (for this Module) I thought I would provide the timeline that is forming from Hancock's evidence.

Bear in mind, this is what has been gleaned by the Inquiry and is of course told by Hancock and from his perspective.

1/n
13th Jan - there is clear evidence that Hancock sought advice about Border Controls. He was concerned we weren’t doing enough to prevent the virus coming to the UK.

21st Jan - Italy locks down Lombardy
22nd Jan - Chris Wormald reassigned all other HSC tasks and Covid was made his Number 1 priority. DHSC was taking it seriously.

22nd Jan - Hancock requested a COBR meeting. Downing Street rejected the request.
Read 23 tweets
Nov 30
Prof Dame Harries testimony was the most illuminating of the week so far

Bear in mind, Johnson only needed a handful of scientists to agree with his callous “take it on the chin” response

The Inquiry seems to ask whether Harries was one of them

1/n
Harries is the head of the new UKHSA - the body now in place to lead on the next pandemic.

The Inquiry is right to make this point. This will be the person in charge next time there is a pandemic and their beliefs and approach will affect us all
Inquiry brings in a Telegraph interview Harries gave saying that the likelihood of mandatory restrictions is a lot less and diminishing. She advocates for individual responsibility. This may well mean more “taking it on the chin” for the next pandemic
Read 24 tweets
Nov 30
Matt Hancock in the Covid Inquiry...unlucky for him it's my day off, so here goes the live tweeting

Please mute this thread if you are not interested.
Firstly, the state of the Department for Health and Social Care (DHSC).

Hancock gets tetchy 'not clear that Valance's diary entries were written at the time and not with hindsight'

Ministers are clearly annoyed Valance had written it in the first place.
KC: DHSC was neither funded nor prepared for a health emergency like a pandemic

MH takes an interesting line where he kind of disagrees. Yes we should have been better prepared. But we did step up and achieved a lot - testing, vaccines.
Read 28 tweets
Nov 28
Managed to catch up with Gove's evidence to the Inquiry. It was painful to watch! Politicking at an epic level - trying to obfuscate blame away from him but not overtly dropping others in it...but he did, and like all Ministers he tried to throw scientists under the bus

1/n
Gove was effectively head of the Cabinet Office from Feb 2020. As such, he was responsible for the office meant to take a leadership role during the emergency pandemic phase...

Even from Gove's evidence alone, it was clear the Cabinet Office didn't.
KC: Who was responsible for the failures of the Cabinet Office

MG: blah, blah…structural problems…not me

KC: asks where the failure was

MG: Not the civil servants - the finest in the country.

KC: The Cabinet Office was not fit for purpose?

MG: Yes.
Read 21 tweets

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