10 MORE Experts Criticising the
Coronavirus Panic
By Off Guardian
Following on from our
previous list, here are ten more
expert voices, drowned out or disregarded by the
mainstream narrative, offering their take on the
coronavirus outbreak.
* * *
April 01, 2020
"Information
Clearing House"
-
Dr. Sunetra Gupta
et al.
are an Oxford-based research team constructing an
epidemiological model for the coronavirus outbreak,
their paper has yet to be peer-reviewed, but the
abstract is available online.
Dr Gupta is a
Professor of Theoretical Epidemiology at the University
of Oxford with an interest in infectious disease agents
that are responsible for malaria, HIV, influenza and
bacterial meningitis. She is a recipient of the Sahitya
Akademi Award, the Scientific Medal by the Zoological
Society of London and the Royal Society Rosalind
Franklin Award for her scientific research.
What they
say:
Importantly,
the results we present here suggest the ongoing
epidemics in the UK and Italy started at least a
month before the first reported death and have
already led to the accumulation of significant
levels of herd immunity in both countries. There is
an inverse relationship between the proportion
currently immune and the fraction of the population
vulnerable to severe disease.
–
Fundamental principles of epidemic spread highlight
the immediate need for large-scale serological
surveys to assess the stage of the SARS-CoV-2
epidemic, 24th March 2020
– – –
The
research presents a very different view of the
epidemic to the modelling at Imperial College London
[…] “I’m surprised that there has been such
unqualified acceptance of the Imperial model”, Dr
Gupta said.
[…]
The Oxford
results would mean the country had already acquired
substantial her immunity through the unrecognised
spread of covid19 over more than two months.
Although
some experts have shed doubt on the strength and
length of the human immune response to the virus,
Prof Gupta said the emerging evidence made her
confident that humanity would build up herd immunity
against Covid19
–
“Coronavirus may have infected halt the population”,
Financial Times, 24th March 2020
*
Dr Karin Mölling
is a German virologist whose research focused on
retroviruses, particularly human immunodeficiency virus
(HIV). She was a full professor and director of the
Institute of Medical Virology at the University of
Zurich from 1993 until her retirement in 2008 and
received multiple honours and awards for her work.
What she
says:
You are now
told every morning how many SARS-Corona 2 deaths
there are. But they don’t tell you how many people
already are infected with influenza this winter and
how many deaths it has caused.
This winter,
the flu is not severe, but around 80,000 are
infected. You don’t get these numbers at all.
Something similar occurred two years ago. This is
not put into the right context.
[…]
Every week
a person dies in Berlin from multi-resistant germs.
That adds up to 35,000 a year in Germany. This is
not mentioned at all. I believe that we have had
situations like this several times and that the
measures are now being taken too far.
I am of the
opinion that maybe one should not do so much against
young people having parties together and infecting
each other. We have to build immunity somehow. How
can that be possible without contacts? The younger
ones handle the infection much better. But we have
to protect the elderly, and protect them in a way
that can be scrutinized; is it reasonable what we
are doing now, to stretch out the epidemic in a way
that almost paralyzes the entire world economy?
[…]
Are You Tired Of
The Lies And
Non-Stop Propaganda?
|
The
Robert Koch Institute provides the figures. Then
you sit there as a listener or spectator: 20
dead again, how terrible! Do you know when I
would start to panic? If there are 20,000. Then
we get close to what went on completely quietly
two years ago.
The 2018
influenza epidemic, with 25,000 deaths, never
disconcerted the press. The clinics had to deal with
an additional 60,000 patients, which was no problem
in the clinics either!
[…]
That is the
main fear: the disease is presented as a terrible
disease. The disease per se is like the flu in a
normal winter. It is even weaker in the first week.
–
Interview on Anti-Empire.com, 23rd March
2020
*
Dr Anders Tegnell
is a Swedish physician and civil servant who has been
State Epidemiologist of the Public Health Agency of
Sweden since 2013. Dr Tegnell graduated from medical
school in 1985, specialising in infectious disease. He
later obtained a PhD in Medical Science from Linköping
University in 2003 and an MSc in 2004.
What he
says:
“All measures
that we take must be feasible over a longer period
of time.” Otherwise, the population will lose
acceptance of the entire corona strategy.
Older people
or people with previous health problems should be
isolated as much as possible. So no visits to
children or grandchildren, no journeys by public
transport, if possible no shopping. That is the one
rule. The other is: Anyone with symptoms should stay
at home immediately, even with the slightest cough.
“If you
follow these two rules, you don’t need any further
measures, the effect of which is only very marginal
anyway,”
–
“The World Stands Still…Except for Sweden”,
Zeit.de, 24th March 2020
*
Dr Pablo Goldschmidt
is an Argentine-French virologist specializing in
tropical diseases, and Professor of Molecular
Pharmacology at the Université Pierre et Marie Curie in
Paris. He is a graduate of the Faculty of Pharmacy and
Biochemistry of the University of Buenos Aires and
Faculty of Medicine of the Hospital Center of
Pitié-Salpetrière, Paris.
He currently
resides in France, where he has worked for almost 40
years as a researcher in clinical laboratories
developing diagnostic technology.
What he
says:
The
ill-founded opinions expressed by international
experts, replicated by the media and social networks
repeat the unnecessary panic that we have previously
experienced. The coronavirus identified in China in
2019 caused nothing less than a strong cold or flu,
with no difference so far with cold or flu as we
know , ”
[…]
Respiratory
viral conditions are numerous and are caused by
several viral families and species, among which the
respiratory syncytial virus (especially in infants),
influenza (influenza), human metapneumoviruses,
adenoviruses, rhinoviruses, and various
coronaviruses, already described years ago. It is
striking that earlier this year global health alerts
have been triggered as a result of infections by a
coronavirus detected in China, COVID-19, knowing
that each year there are 3 million newborns who die
in the world of pneumonia and 50,000 adults in the
United States for the same cause, without alarms
being issued.
[…]
Our planet
is the victim of a new sociological phenomenon,
scientific-media harassment , triggered by experts
only on the basis of laboratory molecular diagnostic
analysis results. Communiqués issued from China and
Geneva were replicated, without being confronted
from a critical point of view and, above all,
without stressing that coronaviruses have always
infected humans and always caused diarrhoea and what
people call a banal cold or common cold. Absurd
forecasts were extrapolated, as in 2009 with the
H1N1 influenza virus.
[…]
There is no
evidence to show that the 2019 coronavirus is more
lethal than respiratory adenoviruses, influenza
viruses, coronaviruses from previous years, or
rhinoviruses responsible for the common cold.
–
Interview on Clarin.com, 9th March 2020
*
Dr Eran Bendavid
and
Dr Jay Bhattacharya
are professors of medicine and public health at Stanford
University.
What they
say:
[P]rojections
of the death toll could plausibly be orders of
magnitude too high […] The true fatality rate is the
portion of those infected who die, not the
deaths from identified positive cases.
The latter
rate is misleading because of selection bias in
testing. The degree of bias is uncertain because
available data are limited. But it could make the
difference between an epidemic that kills 20,000 and
one that kills two million.
[…]
A universal
quarantine may not be worth the costs it imposes on
the economy, community and individual mental and
physical health. We should undertake immediate steps
to evaluate the empirical basis of the current
lockdowns.
“Is
the Coronavirus as Deadly as They Say?”, Wall Street
Journal, 24th March 2020
*
Dr Tom Jefferson
is a British epidemiologist, based in Rome. He works for
the Cochrane Collaboration, where he is an author and
editor of the Cochrane Collaboration’s acute respiratory
infections group, as well as part of four other Cochrane
groups. He is also an advisor to the Italian National
Agency for Regional Health Services.
What he
says:
So I cannot
answer my nagging doubts, there does not seem to be
anything special about this particular epidemic of
influenza-like illness.
There are,
however, two consequences of this situation that
bother me.
The first
is the lack of institutional credibility as
perceived by my friends. They range from
firefighters, policemen, and even a GP — not the
kind of people you would want to alienate in an
emergency. A restaurant owner told me he would never
report himself to the health authority as that would
mean at least two weeks of closure and his business
would go to the wall.
The second
is that once the limelight has moved on, will there
be a serious and concentrated international effort
to understand the causes and origins of
influenza-like illnesses and the life cycle of its
agents?
Past form
tells me not, and we will go back to pushing
influenza as a universal plague under the roof of
the hot house of commercial interest. Note the
difference: Influenza (caused by influenza A and B
viruses, for which we have licensed vaccines and
drugs), not influenza-like illnesses against which
we should wash our hands all the year round, not
just now.
Meanwhile,
I still cannot answer Mario’s question: what’s
different this time?
–
“Covid 19—many questions, no clear answers”,
British Medical Journal, 2nd March 2020
*
Dr Michael Levitt
is Professor of biochemistry at Stanford University. He
is a Fellow of the Royal Society (FRS), a member of the
National Academy of Sciences and received the 2013 Nobel
Prize in Chemistry for the development of multiscale
models for complex chemical systems.
In
February this year, he
correctly modelled that the China outbreak was coming to
an end, predicting
around 80,000 cases and 3250 deaths.
What he
says:
I don’t
believe the numbers in Israel, not because they’re
made up, but because the definition of a case in
Israel keeps changing and it’s hard to evaluate the
numbers that way…
There is a lot
of unjustified panic in Israel. I don’t believe the
numbers here, everything is politics, not math. I
will be surprised if number of deaths in Israel
surpasses ten, and even five now with the
restrictions.
[…]
To put
things in proportion, the number of deaths of
coronavirus in Italy is 10% of the number of deaths
of influenza in the country between 2016-2017.
Even in
China it’s hard to look at the number of patients
because the definition of “patient” varies, so I
look at number of deaths. In Israel there are none,
so that’s why it’s not even on the world map for the
disease.”
–
“Nobel laureate: surprised if Israel has more than
10 coronavirus deaths”, Jerusalem Post,
20th March 2020
– – –
[Levitt]
analyzed data from 78 countries that reported more
than 50 new cases of COVID-19 every day and sees
“signs of recovery” in many of them. He’s not
focusing on the total number of cases in a country,
but on the number of new cases identified every day
— and, especially, on the change in that number from
one day to the next.
“Numbers
are still noisy, but there are clear signs of slowed
growth.”
“What we
need is to control the panic,” he said. In the grand
scheme, “we’re going to be fine.”
–
“Why this Nobel laureate predicts a quicker
coronavirus recovery: ‘We’re going to be fine'”,
Los Angeles Times, 22nd March 2020
*
German Network for Evidence-Based
Medicine
is an association of German scientists, researchers and
medical professionals.
The network was
founded in 2000 to disseminate and further develop
concepts and methods of evidence-based and
patient-oriented medicine in practice, teaching and
research, and today has around 1000 members.
What they say:
In the
majority of cases, COVID-19 takes the form of a mild
cold or is even symptom-free. Therefore, it is
highly unlikely that all cases of infection are
recorded, in contrast with deaths which are almost
completely recorded. This leads to an overestimation
of the CFR.
According to a
study of 565 Japanese people evacuated from Wuhan,
all of whom were tested (regardless of symptoms),
only 9.2% of infected people were detected with
currently used symptom-oriented COVID-19 monitoring
[5]. This would mean that the number of infected
people is likely to be about 10 times greater than
the number of registered cases. The CFR would then
only be about one tenth of that currently measured.
Others assume an even higher number of unreported
cases, which would further reduce the CFR.
The
widespread availability of SARS-CoV-2 tests is
limited. In the USA, for example, an adequate,
state-funded testing facility for all suspected
cases has only been available since 11.3.2020 [6].
In Germany as well, there were occasional
bottlenecks which contribute to an overestimation of
the CFR.
As the
disease spreads, it becomes increasingly difficult
to identify a suspected source of infection. As a
result, common colds in people who unknowingly had
contact with a COVID-19 patient are not necessarily
associated with COVID-19 and those affected do not
go to the doctor at all.
An
overestimation of the CFR also occurs when a
deceased person is found to have been infected with
SARS-CoV-2, but this was not the cause of death.
[…]
[T]he CFR
of 0.2% currently measured for Germany is below the
Robert Koch-Institute’s (RKI) calculated influenza
CFRs of 0.5% in 2017/18 and 0.4% in 2018/19, but
above the widely accepted figure of 0.1% for which
there is no reliable evidence.
[…]
Beyond the
(rather questionable) conclusions drawn from the
historical example, there is little evidence that
NPIs for COVID-19 actually lead to a reduction in
overall mortality. A Cochrane Review from 2011 found
no robust evidence for the effectiveness of border
control screenings or social distancing.
[…]
A
systematic review from 2015 found moderate evidence
that school closures delay the spread of an
influenza epidemic, but at high cost. Isolation at
home slows down the spread of influenza but leads to
increased infection of family members. It is
questionable whether these findings can be
transferred from influenza to COVID-19.
It is
completely unclear how long the NPIs must be
maintained and what effects could be achieved
depending on their duration and intensity. The
number of deaths might only be postponed to a later
point in time, without any change in the total
number.
[…]
Many
questions remain unanswered. On the one hand, the
media confronts us daily with alarming reports of an
exponentially increasing number of ill and dead
people worldwide. On the other hand, the media
coverage in no way considers our required criteria
for evidence-based risk communication.
The media
is currently communicating raw data, for example,
there have been “X” infected persons and “Y” deaths
to date. However, this presentation fails to
distinguish between diagnoses and infections.
–
“Covid19: Where is the evidence?”, statement on
their website, March 20th 2020
*
Dr Richard Schabas
is the former Chief Medical Officer of Ontario, Medical
Officer of Hastings and Prince Edward Public Health and
Chief of Staff at York Central Hospital.
What he
says:
[F]ar more
cases are out there than are being reported. This is
because many cases have no symptoms and testing
capacity has been limited. There have been about
100,000 cases reported to date, but, if we
extrapolate from the number of reported deaths and a
presumed case-fatality rate of 0.5 per cent, the
real number is probably closer to two million – the
vast majority mild or asymptomatic.
Likewise, the
actual rate of new cases is probably at least 10,000
a day. If these numbers sound large, though,
remember that the world is a very big place. From a
global perspective, these numbers are very small.
Second, the
Hubei outbreak – by far the largest, and a kind of
worst-case scenario – appears to be winding down.
How bad was it? Well, the number of deaths was
comparable to an average influenza season. That’s
not nothing, but it’s not catastrophic, either, and
it isn’t likely to overwhelm a competent health-care
system. Not even close.
[…]
I am not
preaching complacency. This disease is not going
away any time soon; we should expect more cases and
more local outbreaks. And COVID-19 still has the
potential to become a major global health problem,
with an overall burden comparable to that of
influenza. We need to be vigilant in our
surveillance.
[…]
But we also
need to be sensible. Quarantine belongs back in the
Middle Ages. Save your masks for robbing banks. Stay
calm and carry on. Let’s not make our attempted
cures worse than the disease.
–
“Strictly by the numbers, the coronavirus does not
register as a dire global crisis”, Globe and Mail,
11th March 2020
Another thank you to
Swiss Propaganda Research
for their excellent work, as well as to all the
commenters who provided names and suggestions BTL on the
previous piece. They are not all included, for various
reasons, but it was all useful information. We also
acknowledge voices from other fields, be they
philosophers or
human rights lawyers,
have criticised the response to the outbreak, but we
made the decision to limit these lists solely to those
experts in medicine or biological science.
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