PRESS-NEWS.org - Press Release Distribution
PRESS RELEASES DISTRIBUTION

Government's latest pandemic plan recklessly exposes millions to effects of mass infection

Strategy of infection over vaccination is 'unethical and unscientific' warn experts

2021-07-16
(Press-News.org) The UK government's latest pandemic plan involves recklessly exposing millions of people to the acute and long-term effects of mass infection, warn experts in The BMJ today.

A strategy that chooses mass infection in the young now over vaccination in order to achieve greater population immunity to protect the vulnerable in winter, is "unethical and unscientific" say Dr Deepti Gurdasani and colleagues.

Instead of allowing infections to rise, they urge the government to take urgent actions to inform and protect the public and prepare for autumn.

These include outlining a long-term strategy for pandemic control, keeping basic measures such as masks and physical distancing until cases return to low levels, investing in workplaces, schools and public transport to make them safer, and providing the means for extensive testing and support for people to isolate.

The prime minister's argument that it is better to accept mass infection now than to postpone until winter, when 'the virus has an advantage' is deeply flawed and misleading, they write. Instead, this strategy will place around 48% of the population (children included) who are not yet fully vaccinated, including the clinically vulnerable and those with compromised immune systems, at unacceptable risk.

This approach is already putting intense pressure on struggling healthcare services and will lead to many avoidable deaths and long-term illness, they add. It also provides a fertile environment for selection of escape variants which could have huge consequences for the UK and countries globally.

They point out that more than 1,000 scientists have already signed a letter to the Lancet setting out why allowing mass infection this summer is a 'dangerous and unethical experiment'. The British Medical Association, Directors of Public Health, SAGE, the Academy of Medical Royal Colleges, the Royal College of Nursing and NHS leaders have all highlighted the dangers inherent in allowing mass infection.

Opening the UK up further is billed as "freedom day," but for too many people, removing mandated measures such as wearing masks and physical distancing restrict, rather than enable, freedom.

This, they say, is unlikely to bolster public confidence and engagement in economic activity. And if the government strategy leads us into yet another lockdown, they warn that this could have an even more devastating impact on the economy.

What's more, the public overwhelmingly supports sensible public health measures such as masking indoors. "This begs the question why dangerous public health decisions that are neither in the public interest, or in line with public sentiment, have been made in the midst of a raging pandemic," they write.

INFORMATION:

Externally peer reviewed? No Evidence type: Opinion Subject: UK government pandemic plan



ELSE PRESS RELEASES FROM THIS DATE:

International team of scientists turns methane into methanol at room temperature

International team of scientists turns methane into methanol at room temperature
2021-07-16
A team of researchers from Stanford University and the University of Leuven in Belgium has further elucidated an intriguing process that could be an important step toward a methanol fuel economy with abundant methane as the feedstock, an advance that could fundamentally change how the world uses natural gas. Methanol - the simplest alcohol - is used to make various products, like paints and plastics, and as an additive to gasoline. Rich in hydrogen, methanol can drive new-age fuel cells that could yield significant environmental benefits. If natural gas, of which methane ...

Common medication used to reduce cholesterol levels may reduce COVID-19 severity

2021-07-16
In a new study from University of California San Diego School of Medicine, researchers have confirmed that patients taking statin medications had a 41 percent lower risk of in-hospital death from COVID-19. The findings were published July 15, 2021 in PLOS ONE and expand upon prior research conducted at UC San Diego Health in 2020. Statins are commonly used to reduce blood cholesterol levels by blocking liver enzymes responsible for making cholesterol. They are widely prescribed: The Centers for Disease Control estimates that 93 percent of patients who use a cholesterol-lowering drug use a statin. "When faced with this virus at the beginning of the pandemic, there was a lot of speculation ...

'Get out of the water!' Monster shark movies massacre shark conservation

Get out of the water! Monster shark movies massacre shark conservation
2021-07-15
Undeniably the shark movie to end all shark movies, the 1975 blockbuster, Jaws, not only smashed box office expectations, but forever changed the way we felt about going into the water - and how we think about sharks. Now, more than 40 years (and 100+ shark movies) on, people's fear of sharks persists, with researchers at the University of South Australia concerned about the negative impact that shark movies are having on conservation efforts of this often-endangered animal. In a world-first study, conservation psychology researchers, UniSA's Dr Briana Le Busque and Associate Professor Carla Litchfield have evaluated how sharks are portrayed in movies, finding that ...

Chemical reactions break free from energy barriers using flyby trajectories

Chemical reactions break free from energy barriers using flyby trajectories
2021-07-15
CHAMPAIGN, Ill. -- A new study shows that it is possible to use mechanical force to deliberately alter chemical reactions and increase chemical selectivity - a grand challenge of the field. The study led by University of Illinois Urbana-Champaign researcher Jeffrey Moore and Stanford University chemist Todd Martinezz demonstrates how external mechanical forces alter atomic motions to manipulate reaction outcomes. The study findings are published in the journal Science. "We think of chemical reactions as molecules moving on a surface of potential energy in the way hikers follow the contour map of mountains and valleys along a trail," said lead author Yun ...

Unconventional superconductor acts the part of a promising quantum computing platform

Unconventional superconductor acts the part of a promising quantum computing platform
2021-07-15
Scientists on the hunt for an unconventional kind of superconductor have produced the most compelling evidence to date that they've found one. In a pair of papers, researchers at the University of Maryland's (UMD) Quantum Materials Center (QMC) and colleagues have shown that uranium ditelluride (or UTe2 for short) displays many of the hallmarks of a topological superconductor--a material that may unlock new ways to build quantum computers and other futuristic devices. "Nature can be wicked," says Johnpierre Paglione, a professor of physics at UMD, the director of QMC and senior author on one of the papers. "There could be other reasons we're seeing all this wacky stuff, but ...

Food insufficiency linked to lack of mental health services during pandemic

2021-07-15
A new national study published in Public Health Nutrition on July 15 found that Americans experiencing food insufficiency were three times as likely to lack mental health support during the COVID-19 pandemic than those not experiencing food insufficiency. The most extreme form of food insecurity, food insufficiency occurs when families do not have enough eat. Among a nationally representative sample of 68,611 adults who participated in the US Census Household Pulse Survey in October 2020, 11% reported food insufficiency. Of those, 24% also reported an unmet mental health need compared to 9% of food-sufficient adults. "Hunger, exhaustion, and stress related to not getting enough food to eat may lead ...

Self-inflicted firearm injuries three times more common in rural youth

2021-07-15
A national study published in the Journal of Pediatrics found that Emergency Department (ED) visits by youth for self-harm were nearly 40 percent higher in rural areas compared to urban settings. Strikingly, ED visits by youth for self-inflicted firearm injuries were three times more common in rural areas. Youth from rural areas presenting to the ED for suicidal ideation or self-harm also were more likely to need to be transferred to another hospital for care, which underscores the insufficient mental health resources in rural hospitals. "Our study used pre-pandemic data, and we know that increased attention to youth mental health is even more pressing now everywhere, ...

National survey IDs gaps and opportunities for regenerative medicine workforce

National survey IDs gaps and opportunities for regenerative medicine workforce
2021-07-15
WINSTON-SALEM, NC, July 15, 2021 - Answering a charge from the National Science Board, the RegenMed Development Organization (ReMDO), through its RegeneratOR Workforce Development Initiative, has released the results of a national survey of regenerative medicine biomanufacturing knowledge, skills, and abilities needed for successful employment in the regenerative medicine field. The National Science Board called for the creation of a skilled technical workforce driven by science and engineering in its 2019 report, "The Skilled Technical Workforce: Crafting America's Science and Engineering Enterprise." "The RegeneratOR initiative ...

Screening often misses endometrial cancer in Black women

2021-07-15
A screening tool used to evaluate the need for endometrial cancer biopsies in women frequently misses the signs of this cancer in Black women, according to a new study released today in JAMA Oncology. Dr. Kemi Doll, the lead researcher, and a gynecologic oncologist with the University of Washington School of Medicine, says that the results of the study suggest that the current non-invasive option of transvaginal ultrasound, or TVUS, to determine the appropriateness of a biopsy is not sufficiently accurate or racially equitable with regards to Black women. "Black women have an over 90% higher mortality rate after diagnosis of endometrial cancer when compared with White women in the U.S.," Doll said. "This is a long-standing disparity ...

Arrival of land plants changed Earth's climate control system

Arrival of land plants changed Earths climate control system
2021-07-15
The arrival of plants on land about 400 million years ago may have changed the way the Earth naturally regulates its own climate, according to a new study led by researchers at UCL and Yale. The carbon cycle, the process through which carbon moves between rocks, oceans, living organisms and the atmosphere, acts as Earth's natural thermostat, regulating its temperature over long time periods. In a new study, published in the journal Nature, researchers looked at samples from rocks spanning the last three billion years and found evidence of a dramatic change in how this cycle functioned about 400 million years ago, when plants started to colonise land. Specifically, the researchers noted a ...

LAST 30 PRESS RELEASES:

Empty-handed neurons might cause neurodegenerative diseases

Black women hospitalised in USA with blood infection resistant to last-resort antibiotic at increased risk of death

NEC Society Statement on the Watson vs. Mead Johnson Verdict

Lemur’s lament: When one vulnerable species stalks another

Surf clams off the coast of Virginia reappear – and rebound

Studying optimization for neuromorphic imaging and digital twins

ORNL researchers win Best Paper award for nickel-based alloy tailoring

New beta-decay measurements in mirror nuclei pin down the weak nuclear force

Study uncovers neural mechanisms underlying foraging behavior in freely moving animals

Gene therapy is halting cancer. Can it work against brain tumors?

New copper-catalyzed C-H activation strategy from Scripps Research

New compound from blessed thistle promotes functional nerve regeneration

Auburn’s McCrary Institute, ORNL to partner on first regional cybersecurity center to protect the nation’s electricity grid

New UNC-Chapel Hill study examines the increased adoption of they/them pronouns

Groundbreaking study reveals potential diagnostic marker for multiple sclerosis years before symptom onset

Annals of Internal Medicine presents breaking scientific news at ACP’s Internal Medicine Meeting 2024

Scientists discover new way to extract cosmological information from galaxy surveys

Shoe technology reduces risk of diabetic foot ulcers

URI-led team finds direct evidence of ‘itinerant breeding’ in East Coast shorebird species

Wayne State researcher aims to improve coding peer review practices

Researchers develop a new way to safely boost immune cells to fight cancer

Compact quantum light processing

Toxic chemicals from microplastics can be absorbed through skin

New research defines specific genomic changes associated with the transmissibility of the monkeypox virus

Registration of biological pest control products exceeds that of agrochemicals in Brazil

How reflecting on gratitude received from family can make you a better leader

Wearable technology assesses surgeons’ posture during surgery

AATS and CRF® partner on New York Valves: The structural heart summit

Postpartum breast cancer and survival in women with germline BRCA pathogenic variants

Self-administered acupressure for probable knee osteoarthritis in middle-aged and older adults

[Press-News.org] Government's latest pandemic plan recklessly exposes millions to effects of mass infection
Strategy of infection over vaccination is 'unethical and unscientific' warn experts