Advertisement

We need your help now

Support from readers like you keeps The Journal open.

You are visiting us because we have something you value. Independent, unbiased news that tells the truth. Advertising revenue goes some way to support our mission, but this year it has not been enough.

If you've seen value in our reporting, please contribute what you can, so we can continue to produce accurate and meaningful journalism. For everyone who needs it.

Alamy Stock Photo

Prof Ruairí Brugha Four questions people have about Ireland's approach to Covid-19 right now

People need hope – but they also want answers about what’s happening with Covid in Ireland right now, writes Prof Ruairí Brugha.

PEOPLE NEED HOPE but they also want answers to questions. Firstly, is Ireland on track to control Covid-19. Secondly, why are we are being asked to go the extra mile over the next two months? Thirdly, why is what we have done – lockdowns, compliance with public health measures and among the highest vaccination rates worldwide – not sufficient? Were we sold a pup? And finally, as masks in primary schools are advised, are we dumping on our children?

Much of the anger and heat earlier on this week was about antigen tests; some of the public and media were as frustrated with decision makers as the Government appeared to be with NPHET. Some people will use antigen tests correctly (when they have no symptoms), potentially leading to modest but important reductions in Covid transmission – for example when used in advance of a visit to an elderly or vulnerable person.

Others will use them incorrectly (when they have symptoms), contributing to increased transmission if a negative test result is seen as permission-giving. These two outcomes might well cancel each other out. On balance, there is a good case and widespread demands for making more subsidised antigen tests available. But an antigen test, of itself, will not prevent Covid-19 transmission, which depends on people’s preceding and subsequent behaviour. So let’s turn to the bigger questions.

Is Ireland on track? 

Any residual doubt that prevention of unmanageable levels of hospitalisation requires a three-dose vaccine schedule has gone. A third shot can also reduce transmission. Ireland has shown that it can deliver high vaccination coverage rates – however, at 200,000 shots per week, it could take up to late-March to deliver the third shot to all previously vaccinated adults. This needs to be accelerated, focusing first on the vulnerable, which will be tricky. We need, but don’t yet have, a national register of vulnerable persons.

If we can provide the third dose by the end of January to all those over 40 years of age, we can suppress the worst of the pandemic, giving time for vaccines with longer-term effectiveness to be developed, tested and rolled out. So yes, there is good reason for hope; but only if we are willing to forego risky behaviours in the next two months, which would snatch away the hope for many.

Not just what, but why

That brings us to the second question, and the two consequences of not going the extra mile. It is no longer enough for the Government to tell us what we should be doing. Most of us know all that, even if some don’t comply. The answer to “why” matters a great deal.

Most of the vulnerable people who have yet to get their third vaccine shot live at home. Older people are well on the way to being fully covered with three shots, but those with underlying medical conditions are vulnerable to being infected by relatives and friends who are not willing to go that extra mile. Many could become seriously ill and some die, as a result.

The second consequence is the impact of the current pandemic wave on doctors, nurses and other health staff who treat patients every day. There are few if any others in society whose are willing to take such high levels of risk. Like most countries, we are blessed by having women and men who put their health and lives on the line each day without counting the cost.

Even if we feel immune to the complications of Covid, following two vaccine shots, we and our loved ones need a health service that can meet all of the other healthcare needs – timely cancer diagnoses and treatments, mental health services (partly because of the effects of lockdowns), and care for trauma, heart attacks and strokes.

Were we sold a pup? 

Thirdly, while frustration is understandable, we knew from the results of the various trials that the new vaccines would not prevent infections: that they would have a large effect on reducing serious complications and a smaller impact on transmission of the virus. Somehow, in the excitement of seeing vaccines developed, tested and rolled out in record time, the small print escaped us. Perhaps health authorities or politicians over-sold their benefits. Next time, let’s not oversell the benefits or under-estimate the challenges of achieving effective pandemic control.

We were also warned about the likelihood of variants from the start of the pandemic. The maths of the Delta variant is simple, but difficult to comprehend: in the absence of control measures, one person with the original Covid-19 virus could infect between 15 and 40 others, after three transmission steps, or a period of two to three weeks. One person with Delta could lead to around 250 further infections in the same period. 

Instead of reducing transmission of the virus by 70-80%, vaccination results in a more modest 50% reduction in Delta virus transmission. Yet many people who should know better feel they can dispense with masks in public indoor settings and in the stands at matches. The latest scare of a new variant, with the first European case detected in Belgium yesterday, is reason for them to rethink their behaviour. 

National decision makers – the Government, HSE and NPHET – have done most things well but have often been slow in initiating actions, most recently with the third dose of vaccines. More puzzling than the inertia in accepting the evidence on waning immunity was the delay in introducing mandatory mask-wearing (or at least masks as the norm) in primary schools. Requiring masks in secondary schools, where pupils can be vaccinated, but not in primary schools, where most children cannot be vaccinated, was counter-intuitive to the point of absurdity.

The rapid rise in Covid cases among 5- to 12-year-olds was evident by early October at a time when contact tracing in schools had stopped, which meant that the real rise in case numbers was being under-estimated. By the end of October, by which point a further review of the evidence on extending the use of masks to younger children had been suggested by the Covid Expert Advisory, case numbers had doubled.

Impact on our children 

So, finally, as NPHET advises that children nine years and older should wear masks in school and public indoor settings, are we dumping on our children? While there will be good reasons for some children not to wear them, negative effects of masks in younger as well as older children are for the most part negligible; and the ‘good enough’ evidence of their effectiveness has grown stronger in the last month.

Mask-wearing in schools and other congregated settings will reduce the impact of circulating airborne viruses on general practices and PCR testing centres. Unlike antigen tests, masks are a primary prevention tool that directly reduce virus transmission, reducing the need to determine if symptoms are due to COVID-19 or another infection. They directly benefit children by making it less likely to have to take time off school, because of symptoms and because of class and school closures. And a mask-wearing policy will give us the breathing space to roll out vaccines to 5- to 11-year-olds in the early months of 2022.

However, the question is rightly being asked: are we asking more of our children than our adults when we advise children to reduce socialising outside of school – justified as that advice is – but we don’t put the same expectation on adults?

Let there be no doubt about where lie the greatest dangers and the greatest need for consistent mask-wearing. They lie in pubs, restaurants and night clubs, where adults are least likely to wear them; and in the crowded stands of large sports events where clear advice and enforcement of mask-wearing is needed. If we are asking our children to step into the breach, for their and our benefit, they deserve more of adults.

Ruairí Brugha is Emeritus Professor, RCSI University of Medicine and Health Sciences.

Readers like you are keeping these stories free for everyone...
A mix of advertising and supporting contributions helps keep paywalls away from valuable information like this article. Over 5,000 readers like you have already stepped up and support us with a monthly payment or a once-off donation.

Close
38 Comments
This is YOUR comments community. Stay civil, stay constructive, stay on topic. Please familiarise yourself with our comments policy here before taking part.
Leave a Comment
    Install the app to use these features.
    Mute Joanne Holland
    Favourite Joanne Holland
    Report
    Jan 6th 2023, 5:43 PM

    Good on ye! Someone has to do something and yet again it’s nurses. My mum was dying in ICU when we had the last nurses strike in 2019 and in spite of wanting the best for my mum I absolutely supported the nurses then and I will now. They were quite simply angels who helped us through the toughest of times and gave my dear mum what little dignity they could in her final days.

    304
    Install the app to use these features.
    Mute Patrick O Connell
    Favourite Patrick O Connell
    Report
    Jan 6th 2023, 6:38 PM

    I went into limerick hospital on a Friday late evening with chest pains about two years, the A&E doctor was fairly sure it was muscular after a few tests. Saturday I felt fine and wanted to be discharged, the doctor said he needed the cardiac consultant to see me but he wouldn’t be in till Monday morning. 5pm Monday I was discharged. If there was a cardiac consultant on over the weekend, I could have been gone home Saturday instead off occupying a bed for an extra two nights. Bad management all around, support the nurses but everyone know it’s management is the issue

    182
    Install the app to use these features.
    Mute fintan doyle
    Favourite fintan doyle
    Report
    Jan 7th 2023, 7:31 AM

    @Patrick O Connell: the lawyers kept you in for 2 nights

    10
    Install the app to use these features.
    Mute The next small thing
    Favourite The next small thing
    Report
    Jan 6th 2023, 6:03 PM

    I wonder will they call off any industrial action when a few of their members get some middle management posts (which will then create more paperwork for the staff on the wards) like they did the last time they striked.

    125
    Install the app to use these features.
    Mute Jon Boylan
    Favourite Jon Boylan
    Report
    Jan 6th 2023, 6:09 PM

    Typical contribution from this so called leader. Just how constructive is a call for strike ballot right now. Typical – all bluster and offers nothing in the way of constructive solution. But wait – a 10% salary increase will cure all her ills. Meanwhile the rest of can whistle dixie.

    95
    Install the app to use these features.
    Mute Just Some Guy
    Favourite Just Some Guy
    Report
    Jan 6th 2023, 6:44 PM

    Threatening to go on strike so they can get more money.. Typical while patients of all ages are the ones who have to spend hours in A and E waiting to be seen. Dumped on trollies or chairs and after been seen left with a bill unless you have a medical card.

    67
    Install the app to use these features.
    Mute Brendan Harlowe
    Favourite Brendan Harlowe
    Report
    Jan 6th 2023, 7:01 PM

    @Just Some Guy: if this is what you think it’s about, you need to put down the FFFG branded cool-aid .

    155
    Install the app to use these features.
    Mute Fiona Fitzgerald
    Favourite Fiona Fitzgerald
    Report
    Jan 6th 2023, 8:18 PM

    @Just Some Guy: Read the articles. They’re as stressed over the overcrowding and understaffing as anyone else – unlike the patients and voters, they’re doing something to change this ridiculous scenario where every year hundreds of sick people are stuck in corridors. Ireland needs thousands more bed spaces And the staff to give them the healthcare they all deserve. Good for the staff who aren’t being fobbed off with annual excuses. They’re the very people who have been warning the people of Ireland that this is not only happening again but getting worse.

    67
    See 5 more replies ▾
    Install the app to use these features.
    Mute Donal Desmond
    Favourite Donal Desmond
    Report
    Jan 6th 2023, 8:22 PM

    @Just Some Guy: Jesus, Varadkar, Martin, Donnelly will be delighted with you for that comment. Wonder why you didn’t blame Doctors ,Nurses, and the staff working themselves to the bone for being responsible for the chaos in the Health service. Bit ironic you failed to mention it was FFG policy the created this mess. Of course that would not suit your agenda…

    65
    Install the app to use these features.
    Mute Patrick O Connell
    Favourite Patrick O Connell
    Report
    Jan 6th 2023, 8:26 PM

    @Donal Desmond: we have Dave the Ra shouting at anyone that will listen that our health system is terrible and yet his comrade Martina Anderson telling anyone who listen in the North that we have a Dar superior health service.

    13
    Install the app to use these features.
    Mute Donal Desmond
    Favourite Donal Desmond
    Report
    Jan 6th 2023, 9:18 PM

    @Patrick O Connell: Perhaps it has escaped your attention that SF is not in government in the South. You conveniently fail to mention it is FFG who between them have governed this state since it’s foundation. Yet you blame the opposition for the catastrophic health service. As for the North there has been no Government in place since the DUP threw their rattler out of the pram.

    36
    Install the app to use these features.
    Mute clairebear
    Favourite clairebear
    Report
    Jan 6th 2023, 11:31 PM

    @Just Some Guy: did you even read the article? It’s not about money it’s about staffing levels and overcrowding. Nothing will change anyway but at least they are highlighting it

    22
    Install the app to use these features.
    Mute Paul Scully
    Favourite Paul Scully
    Report
    Jan 7th 2023, 7:52 PM

    @Just Some Guy: Nurse’s are not going on strike over pay they are going on strike over Patient safety no Nurse’s no beds and no support, have you worked a 12hr shift with no break???

    3
    Install the app to use these features.
    Mute Ewan O'Doherty
    Favourite Ewan O'Doherty
    Report
    Jan 6th 2023, 6:37 PM

    If a disaster like the Stardust were to take place, what would happen? It doesn’t bear thinking about

    55
    Install the app to use these features.
    Mute Linda Oreilly
    Favourite Linda Oreilly
    Report
    Jan 7th 2023, 12:14 AM

    This is worse than it has ever been….our daughter is a palliative nurse and is trying to treat cancer patients on a trolley in A and E…this is beyond disgusting….get Leo and the other ministers in and see for them selves what it is like…something needs to be done

    39
    Install the app to use these features.
    Mute Eddie Feeney
    Favourite Eddie Feeney
    Report
    Jan 7th 2023, 12:21 AM

    @Linda Oreilly: Leo knows exactly what it’s like. He was originally a doctor in Connolly Hospital in Blanchardstown. Martin was previously a health minister. They know precisely what’s wrong but chose to do nothing about it because it doesn’t directly affect them.

    33
    Install the app to use these features.
    Mute Damien Leen
    Favourite Damien Leen
    Report
    Jan 7th 2023, 1:12 PM

    @Eddie Feeney: they’ll just ride out this storm besides actually doing something ie actually do a bit of work. But they will give themselves a couple more Pay rises that you can be assured of.
    Who knows, maybe these guys are playing the long con so, leave the country in such a state of disarray that when SF do take the hot seat things will be so bad people will just blame them then the current bunch will be back in power before they know it.

    4
    Install the app to use these features.
    Mute SandraMeyler
    Favourite SandraMeyler
    Report
    Jan 7th 2023, 12:46 AM

    Toothless Union,

    17
    Install the app to use these features.
    Mute Colm Molloy
    Favourite Colm Molloy
    Report
    Jan 7th 2023, 4:33 AM

    Fix the health system, end of, as the English say.

    5
    Install the app to use these features.
    Mute Barrycelona
    Favourite Barrycelona
    Report
    Jan 8th 2023, 6:02 PM

    When it comes to nurses, it is difficult to be critical, even constructively, because everyone reverts to the emotional arguments to push their point and in so many ways we are so grateful to them.
    That said, a lot of the working conditions incl trollies is largely down to nurses unions. They are the frontline. These problems did not develop overnight. Their unions threaten strikes over pay but claim it is all about ‘ patient safety’, yet when have we heard them threaten to go out on strike because of trollies, understaffed/ under equipped services which has been going on for years and only gets worse. 24hr healthcare i e. The likes of MRI scanners etc etc etc being made available. But probably as important, we have seen the decline in nurse morale, nurse numbers and conditions to a frightening level for all which begs the question as to what their unions are doing to protect the profession and patients. So why not use your political influence and threaten to withdraw your services in order to protect patients and profession as often as ye do for money, then we would all be better off. Personally I believe nurses deserve greater pay and conditions and an liveable ‘ Dublin housing allowance’

    1
Submit a report
Please help us understand how this comment violates our community guidelines.
Thank you for the feedback
Your feedback has been sent to our team for review.

Leave a commentcancel

 
JournalTv
News in 60 seconds