Medical staff wearing PPE, on a ward for Covid-19 patients at King's College Hospital, London. Photo / AP
A number of governments have changed their approaches to the coronavirus, to one that is more like how we treat the flu. Public health experts say it's too soon to make that call.
In Britain, France, Spain and other countries across Europe, politicians and some public health experts are pushinga new approach to the coronavirus pandemic borne of both boldness and resignation: that the illness is becoming a fixture of daily life.
Governments are seizing a moment in which their populations have experienced less severe illness and, in some instances, a drop in new daily cases after weeks of record growth. And they are moving their mitigation policies off emergency footing.
In Spain, for instance, Prime Minister Pedro Sánchez declared last week that citizens would "have to learn to live with it, as we do with many other viruses," and said that the country should adjust the national approach to more closely align with how it handles influenza outbreaks. Olivier Véran, the French health minister, said recently that France's high level of infection and strong vaccination rate could "maybe" mean this would be the final wave.
The shift comes even as the World Health Organisation cautioned this week against treating the virus like the seasonal flu, saying it was too soon to make that call. Much about the disease remains unknown, the WHO said. And a surge in cases driven by the omicron variant is still battering the continent, while the population of much of the world remains vulnerable because of a lack of widespread vaccination, and more variants are still likely to arise.
Still, advocates of the "learn to live with it" approach point out that the latest surge in cases is different from the early days of the virus in several important ways, including a largely vaccinated population in parts of Europe, especially in the West, and a far lower rate of hospitalisation.
The sentiment is evident in the evolving policies that the British government has adopted since the start of this year, a stark departure from the "war footing" that the country's health service preached in December.
The changes include shorter isolation periods and the elimination of pre-departure tests for people travelling to England — largely because omicron was already so prevalent that the tests had a limited effect on its spread.
There have been some concrete signs that Britain may be turning a corner. There were 99,652 new cases reported Friday, a notable drop from the 178,250 cases reported on the same day last week.
"It can't be an emergency forever," Graham Medley, a professor of infectious disease modelling at the London School of Hygiene and Tropical Medicine, told BBC Radio 4 this week. He added that the end of the pandemic was likely to occur in phases rather than appear as "an active point in time" when it can be declared to be over.
Amid this shift, the messaging to the public has varied, often in confusing ways. The guidance can be all over the map, with some politicians declaring the latest wave over and others advocating a gradual return to normalcy — all while many experts express caution about all of the unknowns and the potential for new variants.
Peter English, a retired consultant in communicable disease control, said that for many public health experts and scientists in Britain, the debate had shifted away from lockdowns to common-sense mitigation measures. Most are now encouraging measures like mandatory masking in public settings and legislation for ventilation standards.
"There had been an argument about zero Covid and trying to eliminate the virus through restrictions," he said. "I think that we've lost that argument. I think that by allowing it to spread to the extent it has, it will be very, very difficult to put the genie back into the bottle."
From that perspective, he said, "we're going to have to live with it being endemic." But, he added, "endemic doesn't mean not serious," and he urged caution against the idea of simply "learning to live with it" without mitigation measures in place.
One of the biggest concerns in England has been the intense pressure that the virus puts on the National Health Service, or NHS. But some of the immediate concerns that Britain's hospitals could become overwhelmed with patients during this latest wave have begun to ease.
Matthew Taylor, head of the NHS Confederation, a membership organization for the heads of hospitals, said Wednesday that "unless things change unexpectedly, we are close to the national peak of Covid patients in hospital."
In Spain, a new monitoring system is being created to come into effect once the current surge in cases ebbs, and the country also recently relaxed its isolation rules. But Madrid's push for omicron to be treated more like the flu has been criticised by some doctors and professional associations as well as by the European Medicines Agency, who say the virus is still behaving as a pandemic.
In France, infections are still trending upward, with nearly 300,000 newly reported coronavirus cases a day this week, almost six times as many as a month ago. But President Emmanuel Macron, who is facing a presidential election in April, has opted to keep minimal restrictions in place and focused instead on urging the French to get vaccinated.
Macron's government has rejected accusations that it has given up on reducing the number of cases, including in schools, which faced widespread strikes Thursday by teachers concerned with classroom safety.
Véran, the French health minister, who tested positive for the coronavirus Thursday, said authorities were keeping a close eye on data from Britain to ascertain whether France was nearing its own peak.
Germany is several weeks behind some of its European neighbours in confronting an uptick in infections. It reported 80,430 new cases Tuesday, breaking a record set in November. But independent scientific experts have held off advising the government to impose new restrictions despite widespread agreement that infection numbers would continue to rise.
Christian Drosten, the country's most famous virologist, noted that Germany would most likely eventually have to move to treating the virus as endemic.
"Let's put it this way: We shouldn't open the gate completely," he said last week in a podcast interview. "But in some areas, we have to open the door to the virus a bit."
Italy, too, is grappling with some of the highest daily infection rates since early in the pandemic. But in recent weeks, it has tightened restrictions, making vaccines mandatory for those 50 and older, including requiring a health pass to use public transportation.
A spokesperson for the Italian Health Ministry said that the country was "still in a delicate phase" and that the recent daily surges in cases continued to put pressure on intensive care units. Italian scientists have tended to agree that it is too early to declare the situation endemic, even if the time had come "to start thinking about the new normal" of coexisting with the virus, said Fabrizio Pregliasco, a virus expert at the University of Milan.
That kind of caution is evident among a wide array of health professionals and researchers across Europe, some of whom issued a plea this week in The British Medical Journal for better coordination in approaching the pandemic. They argued that there was still an urgent need to "reduce infections to avoid overwhelming health systems and protect public life and the economy."
"Even under the most optimistic assumptions," they wrote, "letting omicron run unfettered risks potentially devastating consequences."
In England, hospitalisations are still very high in some areas, particularly in the northeast, and illness among health care workers is still straining the system.
England needs to take a "thoughtful, managed approach" to the pandemic "while thinking about what our new normal will look like," said Saffron Cordery, the deputy CEO for NHS Providers, the membership organisation for England's health staff.
But, she added, it was clear that the country had started to develop a pattern of living through several waves of the virus. With much uncertainty still ahead, she said it would be misguided to think of this moment as an inflection point.
"Rather than being a 100-meter straight-line sprint down to the finish line of Covid," she explained, "it's more of a longer-term cross-country run through all sorts of different terrains before we get to that destination."