News & Views

British Indian academic questions UK’s lockdown strategy

Nadia Hatink

A prominent British Indian Oxford University academic, Professor Sunetra Gupta, leads a group of over 30 academics who have expressed their doubts over the UK government’s lockdown approach to tackling a dreaded second wave of the coronavirus pandemic.

Gupta, Professor of Theoretical Epidemiology at the University of Oxford, co-authored a letter addressed to UK Prime Minister Boris Johnson, Chancellor Rishi Sunak and the Chief Medical Officers (CMOs) of England, Wales, Scotland and Northern Ireland last week as “constructive input” into the government’s policy response to the rising number of coronavirus infections. The Gupta-led group recommends more targeted measures that protect the groups most vulnerable to the deadly virus.

Targeted measures

“In summary, our view is that the existing policy path is inconsistent with the known risk-profile of Covid-19 and should be reconsidered,” notes the open letter.

“Instead, more targeted measures that protect the most vulnerable from Covid, whilst not adversely impacting those not at risk, are more supportable… Such targeted measures should be explored as a matter of urgency, as the logical cornerstone of our future strategy,” the group says.

They argue that because 89 per cent of Covid-19 deaths are in the over 65 group and are also concentrated in people with pre-existing medical conditions, these are the groups at which interventions should be targeted.

“This large variation in risk by age and health status suggests that the harm caused by uniform policies (that apply to all persons) will outweigh the benefits,” the letter reads, warning that the effect on cancer treatment is especially acute, with people delaying or missing screenings, tests, or treatments.

Herd immunity?

However, Gupta’s team goes head to head with a contrary scientific point of view put forward in an open letter by Trisha Greenhalgh, Chair of Primary Care Health Aciences at Oxford University, signed by Edinburgh-based Indian-origin academic Devi Sridhar, Chair of Global Public Health, Edinburgh Medical School, among 23 other academics.

“We strongly support your continuing efforts to suppress the virus across the entire population, rather than adopt a policy of segmentation or shielding the vulnerable until ‘herd immunity’ has developed,” reads the letter addressed to the CMOs.

“Society is an open system. To cut a cohort of ‘vulnerable’ people off from ‘non-vulnerable’ or ‘less vulnerable’ is likely to prove practically impossible, especially for disadvantaged groups… The goal of ‘herd immunity’ rests on the unproven assumption that re-infection will not occur. We simply do not know whether immunity will wane over months or years in those who have had Covid-19,” they write.

Their letter, published in the ‘British Medical Journal’, says that the UK may have to move flexibly between levels of restriction rather than either full lockdown or release, depending on how well the virus is controlled. They also flag that measures that would help control the virus while also promoting economic recovery include making face coverings mandatory in crowded indoor spaces, improving ventilation in schools and workplaces, continuing to require social distancing, and discouraging large indoor gatherings.

Rival camps

The scientific community clash comes as a new set of restrictions enforceable by fines between £1,000 and £10,000 come in force across England from this week. Johnson has told Parliament that the country should expect all restrictions to remain in place for around six months, with more stringent measures expected in various regions, including London, as the infection rate continues to spike.

“The unstated objective currently appears to be one of suppression of the virus, until such a time that a vaccine can be deployed. This objective is increasingly unfeasible,” warns Prof. Gupta’s group in their letter.

On the other hand, the group backed by Prof. Sridhar, notes: “Despite claims to the contrary from some quarters, there are no examples of a segmentation-and-shielding policy having worked in any country.”

The two sets of open letters indicate a growing split across the UK over tackling the second wave of the pandemic, with rival camps divided between strict lockdowns and greater freedom on people's movements and businesses.

by Nadia Hatink

SCROLL FOR NEXT