While health authorities in Australia have been crowing about how many supposed lives the tyrannical lockdowns saved, with the state of Victoria having the longest lockdown in the world, longer than even communist China, the UK Health Security Agency, recently released a report showing that at least for the UK, the evidence for non-vaccine methods for controlling Covid transmission was poor. That includes lockdowns, social distancing and face masks. The report examined 151 studies by a type of meta-analysis, with these studies overall finding that there is a lack of strong evidence for the effectiveness of measures such as lockdowns, preventing Covid transmission. Yes, small business and people’s livings were destroyed on no basis at all. There is a stark lesson here about trusting the medical profession, Big Pharma, and certainly the lying government.
Of course, the sacred vax was not examined, and outside of Big Pharma sales pitch, the historical evidence of most vaccinated people getting Covid numerous times, well refutes the idea that the Covid vaxxes in any way stopped transmission. While the UK study was made in preparation for the next pandemic, there seems to be little sound methods left in the public health tool kit.
https://unherd.com/thepost/government-report-no-good-evidence-that-lockdown-worked/
“On Wednesday, the UK Health Security Agency quietly released a review which found that the evidence base for the effectiveness of non-pharmaceutical interventions (NPIs) on Covid transmission was weak. These include such measures as lockdown, the ‘rule of 6’, test and isolation, face coverings, border restrictions, and more.
The review identified 151 studies conducted in the UK. Two-thirds of the evidence identified was based on modelling studies, and there were only two randomised control trials included. Studies focused on measures to identify or isolate infectious people or reduce the number of human contacts were the most numerous. Only nine studies focused on measures to protect the most vulnerable.
The report concluded that “there is a lack of strong evidence on the effectiveness of NPIs to reduce COVID-19 transmission”:
The body of evidence available on effectiveness of NPIs in the UK provides weak evidence in terms of study design, as it is mainly based on modelling studies, ecological studies, mixed-methods studies and qualitative studies.
- UK HEALTH SECURITY AGENCY
The review noted the many challenges with evaluating NPI effectiveness, which makes the current evidence-base prone to confounding and bias.
In most cases, [current NPI effectiveness] would be graded as low or very low certainty in the Grading of Recommendations, Assessment, Development, and Evaluations (GRADE) framework and rule out causal inference.
- UK HEALTH SECURITY AGENCY
This includes the way NPIs were implemented, levels of adherence and compliance, wider behavioural changes, the difficulties of isolating one NPI from a range (or ‘package’) of measures, endpoint measurements, poor study designs and study quality, and ethical considerations. The report went on to recommend a strengthening of evaluation research for NPI interventions in the future.
The report is part of ongoing efforts by the UKHSA, and other government departments, to digest the state of knowledge on NPI effectiveness in preparation for the next pandemic. However, as with a recent Royal Society Report current analyses have not yet focused on the wider social, economic, psychological and political impacts of NPIs.
The report fails to mention that public health research should, in principle, weigh the impact of specific interventions on a virus against their full societal impact, including their social harms and unintended consequences.
This myopic definition of “effectiveness” continues to hamper an intelligent and holistic assessment of whether NPIs were, all said and done, really the best of many bad options.
The decision to implement lockdown and the pandemonium of rules unleashed on the British public during the crisis were, in the end, political decisions. Epidemiological studies on Covid ‘effectiveness’ can only take us so far in trying to understand the Covid years, and what decisions should be made in future.
Luckily, next week the UK Covid Inquiry opens its nine-week second investigation (Module 2), focused on decision-making and political governance. In this regard, I am sure we will learn more about the ‘effectiveness’ of our contemporary British government.