
It’s no surprise that the COVID-19 pandemic is rattling a few brains.
Pity the economic commentators who have spent the last twenty years divining political wisdom based on excruciatingly minuscule budget surpluses or deficits and then watching the Commonwealth rack up $184 billion and counting in debt in the space of a couple of weeks.
Feel sorrow for the ideologically obsessed who praised the federal government’s election on small government principles and enthusiastic encouragement for entrepreneurship and private enterprise turn almost in a heartbeat to a large, imposing government that has to nurse the population along financially and emotionally.
Perhaps that’s why Andrew Bolt wrote a column on Monday urging the country back to work in two weeks. He based his claim on declining rates of recorded cases of COVID-19 and he is right about that. Over the weekend recorded cases were in decline. This remains cause for optimism.
He’s not on his own. There are many members of the commentariat of the view that the fit and well should return to work as soon as possible. I actually wish they were right but a few days’ worth of data is no basis for calling an end to a pandemic.
Recorded cases of COVID-19 have doubled in New South Wales since March 25. Victoria showed a decline in recorded cases yesterday but spiked upwards today. The numbers remain small and manageable at this point.
We all have access to general data on COVID-19 infection, transmission rates, death rates, demographic breakdowns. The truly unique aspect of this pandemic is we can see the numbers roll out in real time.
But there is a great gaping hole in the data, something even epidemiologists and immunologists can only guess at.
In Australia, a person may only be tested if they have returned from overseas, been in direct contact with someone who has, is a health care worker, has developed a community acquired form of pneumonia without an established cause, or has had direct contact with an infected person and presents with COVID-19-type symptoms.
The government tells us that we have one of the highest rates of testing in the world and they’re right but only the latter two categories can provide some indication on human to human transmission, perhaps more properly described as community transmission.
We simply don’t have enough data to know where we’re at on this most crucial piece of the puzzle. It may be quite low, but we can’t be sure. Reopening businesses without a proper understanding of the degree of community infection would be reckless and downright dangerous.
Australia’s death rate – a measure of recorded cases divided by deaths as of today is at 0.41 per cent. Relative to the world, it’s almost as good as it gets but it is climbing slowly.
The US is at two per cent and rising. Spain is at 8.82 per cent and France 6.75. All are in the ascendant. Germany, which has a similarly high infection rate to its European neighbours has a death rate at 1.07 per cent but again it is climbing.
Italy’s death rate is at a staggering 11.74 per cent and shows no sign of slowing down.
To date Italy is the best example we have of what happens in a country where the threshold between patients requiring hospital treatment and the capacity of emergency medical response to provide it is crossed.
Australia’s experience of COVID-19 is objectively different to that of Italy but there are differences and similarities that are worthy of note.
Italy first identified two travellers from China as having COVID-19 on January 25. It closed flights from China on January 29; two days before the US and four days before Australia’s shutdown.
There are certain demographics that may have contributed to the extent of the outbreak in Italy. Italy has the second highest ageing population in the world. It has a high smoking rate at 28 per cent of the population above the age of 15. But Japan holds the ageing population title and has a similarly high smoking rate and has recorded just 1,953 cases of COVID-19 and only 56 deaths.
By comparison, 15 per cent of Australians are 65 years of age or older. Australia’s smoking rate is half that of Italy’s.
Population density in Italy, especially in the north is high but again not as high as Japan. Milan has a population density of 7,200 people per square kilometre. Ultimo, in inner Sydney has 19,461 people per square kilometre.
In 2000, Italy’s public health system, Servizio Sanitaro Nazionale, a model not unlike Medicare or the UK’s NHS, was considered one of the best in the world. But austerity measures driven by the economic calamity of the Global Financial Crisis, have meant public health spending has been slashed with Italians having to fund the health system through co-payments running at 23.5 per cent of total expenditure. Australians contribute around 17 per cent.
What this means is a lot of people, particularly in lower socio-economic strata have an almost decade-long history of receiving little or no medical care. Many may be in poor health and thus more susceptible to serious illness and death from COVID-19 infection. Clearly those conditions prevail more in Italy than here.
The remaining contributing factor is the hot issue of the pandemic – the degree and efficacy of testing. In Italy, COVID-19 hit hard and early but fundamentally the testing criteria is the same as Australia’s.
Last month the small town of Vo, near Venice, tested all of its 3000 residents for COVID-19. With or without symptoms, whether they’d been overseas or stayed at home, everyone had the swabs. Eighty-nine people tested positive. They were isolated and provided with medical treatment where necessary. The remaining population was tested again. Six people tested positive. They were isolated. The third round of testing showed no COVID-19 infection. No one died because medical intervention came early. The town went from a hotbed of infection to zero in the space of a Boltian fortnight.
Even if it could be done across a much larger population, it is too late for Italy. While a roll out of universal testing for COVID-19 would be a logistical nightmare in Australia if it is best practice you’re after, it stands as the ideal, bearing in mind testing can only buy time before a vaccine or preventive treatments are established.
The early infection commenced from people who had travelled to northern Italy by air, essentially from China. More infection has occurred in Australia from Europe or the US than came from China. We are at different stages of the pandemic on the basis of transmission alone.
In Italy, 85.65 per cent of those who have died were over 70. More than half of patients who were placed on respirators died. In some hospitals it was as high as 80 per cent.
People who travelled overseas either for holidays or for business purposes or indeed by stepping onto the gangplank of a cruise liner were on the front line of infection.
Behind them on the next line are the elderly and what’s often dismissively referred to as the infirm as if a large chunk of the Australian population is sitting around in wheelchairs spitting into cups in consumption wards.
I can’t tell you what percentage of the population present with high blood pressure, cancer, asthma, is immunosuppressed or compromised, takes tablets for rheumatoid arthritis, or blood thinners for stroke prevention, has diabetes, kidney or liver disease, blood disorders, has fallen pregnant in the previous three months or suffers a range of maladies both pervasive or obscure but on a back of the envelope calculation and combined with the 70 plus age group in, we’d have to be looking at something approaching half the population of the country.
The concept of ‘ring-fencing’ millions of people on the basis of age and/or medical conditions only known by those people and their medicos is unworkable. Let’s start with how the state might enforce it. Any ideas? Anyone? Hello?
While COVID-19 continues to threaten populations, ideology needs to be placed in an induced coma. It is of no utility at present. The very idea of labelling the Morrison government socialist two months ago would have been laughable. It would be accurate now, but it’s not terribly helpful.
To be sure, the back to work crew like Bolt are not cold-hearted robots sitting in front of their adding machines punching in numbers based on the great military euphemisms of our time – collateral damage and megadeaths.
But they are facing a global crisis they’re struggling to comprehend. The response to the COVID-19 pandemic cannot be ideologically based not least of all because the virus itself has no concept of it.
There’s nothing wrong with ideology per se but in the midst of a pandemic, it is a poor substitute for objective fact and when inveigled on what is unknown the consequences can be catastrophic.
This column was first published in The Australian on 1 April, 2020
Jack, good to be back. As we have no footie to barrack for, we will have to put our minds to something else. Thanks TBLS for sending me the link to Jack’s blog.
I heard someone say that we shouldn’t waste time. Do something creative. Write, paint, keep a journal, make a short film – whatever. That makes pretty good sense to me.
I am increasing daily the amount of time I am devoting to practicing on my collection of brass instruments. Am now over an hour a day, and this will increase further. Working my way up to making multi-track recordings. This, in addition to numerous other activities, such as enlarging the veggie garden and making a 20-bottle batch of mead every month. That’s at 18.3% alcohol.
Where do you get the honey from Eccles?
You’re right, mate! No worries. Good to catch up again.
Wrote to you on the previous blog about an issue Jennifer….welcome back Bald!
So Labor is going to play politics with the $130 billion payout,
They will be slaughtered and rightly so – it over who get the power – Gov’t want to do it with legislation with a time limit – Labor wants to do it through Fair Works which I think, is a Labor stronghold.
My suspicion is that Labor wants a precedent for Fair Works – straight politics at a time when people are getting very desperate.
You have nothing to fear.Scotty from Marketing will walk in the next election what with anothe Death Tax lie and 90million from Palmer.Interesting that the architect of the plan for the Liberals against the negative gearing and franking credits campaign now says we cannot afford this.He is right.Why should we give $100million every week to people who have paid no tax.The hard heads in the Liberals know this is unsustanable in the long term just like the wasted money on the subs which will be obsolete whenever we get one.A piece in the Oz said the cost will be 200billion!
I reckon Estate Taxes ( sorry Death Duties) are a dead cert. ( Pardon the pun)
Interesting though in as much it is a tax on the young who will bear the brunt of this for the rest of their lives.
Occasionally I look at my existence and my contribution to society – apart from the wisdom accumulated over the years and expressing it on the deaf ears of the immediate family, and a bit of help with the grand kids, most of it is associated with people my own age.
If I was in a hunter gatherer society, I think I would be left under a tree or, as it has been reported from time to time, wander off on my own volition and not come back.
There is a limit on how much a society can spend on the non-productive elements of their society and I think we are fast approaching it.
The emphasis has to be on the young but to deliberately enact the alternative is frightening.
Yes well said Jack. Schools are other places of criss-crossed information. 550 kids in my 8yr old’s school. PM says send them to school on the best medical advice he has and I did- ’til he was the only one left in the bloody class. Home lessons briiliant with carefully prepared lessons by his teacher online/online marking of his work with his teacher via our Laptop. Face to face roll call every morning and previous work photographed, sent online for the teacher to mark/check We can handle it but it must be the horrors for parents with no teaching background in the family or not computer savvy. There are many devoted teachers out there doing heaps of work which must be much more difficult than having them altogether in class. Then there may be some teachers are doing SFAll but I am sure Principals would be monitoring this very closely.Morrison a few good announcements today….he is doing a great job….summat like flying an aeroplane blind!
School of the Air has been in operation since 1951. I’m certain any school needing a leg up to get lessons to students via the Net could access the necessary curricula, materials and tech support from SotA. Parents don’t need teaching skills, just discipline skills to get the kids in front of a screen and keep them there. Mum was strict with us, and we never missed a class unless we were needed for vital farm work once we were over 12. She ensured we caught up any work missed. We only had the radio, initially the pedal wireless but later a battery model. For poorer families without the means to supply a computer, it would be a wise use of Government largesse to make sure the equipment was available and a connection to the Net supplied gratis. This would also allow students to maintain peer networks for the duration of the pandemic. I’m a SotA graduate and attended from age 6 until I was 15. The only time I saw the inside of a real school was to sit my Junior Certificate exams in Cunnamulla. Distance education works, but parents have a huge role in it, and need to provide the discipline and guidance to make it work. No-one can guess how long this curse will last. Any number is guess work. The Spanish flu hung around for 4
years in 1919. The Government should close all schools immediately on public safety grounds, and get this up and running as a priority.
If Jack is amenable I’d like to reproduce here a comment I made on one of Judith Sloan’s articles at The Oz a few days ago (if there are no copyright issues). I’m not trying to make any ideological point, nor to big-up myself, but just to present something I think is worth saying. I afterwards wrote to The Oz comments editor to thank them for running this because I thought it might be a bit too confronting:
***
Sorry, Judith, but I think you’ve succumbed to the same fear that has driven this whole thing – the fear of mortality. Too many people are scared of dying and that has totally unhinged our government responses from reality. We are all dying. Nobody gets out of life alive. We need to come to peace with it and move on.
And before someone accuses me of being a selfish millenial and asks how I would feel if a family member were affected: I’m a 48 year old man, a volunteer firefighter with a mother about to turn 70. And you know what Mum’s view is? Her view is that if it’s going to happen, it’s going to happen. She is taking reasonable steps to protect herself and others but she is still going to work at her two jobs (one paid in a medical practice, the other a volunteer in an op shop) and otherwise going about life as normal. One thing she has commented on repeatedly is how pleasant, considerate and polite people are being to each other and she wondered yesterday if maybe all the selfish, unpleasant people have locked themselves down.
I’ve seen a few mates die suddenly and unexpectedly for no good reason at all. I’ve worked in situations where things could have gone very badly, very quickly and it’s been sheer luck they haven’t. A few weeks ago I was in a crew that responded to a motor accident where a man had his neck broken and supported his head for two hours until relieved by paramedics and stayed with him during his lengthy extraction from a difficult accident scene. And that experience reminded me that life is neither easy nor fair and it’s ridiculous to expect it to be.
In short, we need to harden up.
***
Am I wrong?
No! You are not wrong. We are a very soft society held together by a few hard people.
But we do not need to act like the Generals in WW1 who repeatedly threw men over the top with little or no regard for causalities.
Without the lock down, we could get to the Spanish situation and I for one would not like to see convoys of army trucks loaded with coffins going to mass graves such as the Iranians dug or to overloaded crematoriums.
Yeah, fair point, John. Like Mum, I think most of us can be careful and reasonable in our behaviour towards others. Some can’t but I really think we’ve gone way too far with this. The speed and enthusiasm with which our governments have embraced police state measures and the tolerance shown – nay, the DEMANDS made – by too many citizens for it have really been deeply disquieting.
This is not the country I thought it was and that freaks me out more than the disease risk.
I think every society around the world is preparing itself for the brave new world where technology rips out an enormous number of jobs leaving an ever increasing pool of unemployable people.
The simple fact that the authorities are reluctant to publish where infections are with this virus and it was only yesterday that one could get a breakdown by postcode in NSW , seems to indicate that they are afraid of the consequences if it was refined down further – and probably rightly so..
The creeping use of CCTV’s everywhere is quite disturbing,
If a technology exists it will be used for good and for bad.
This is just so wrong: Formula 1 racing’s Bernie Ecclestone is proud to announce that he is going to be a father again… at 89.
Although, I should confess, that my baby sister was born a month after his 60th.
Shudder
Yeah! Right!
Viagra is not that good.
Geez and I thought my cue was in the rack for good.
Missed a word there–my father was 60 when sis was born.
He’s been around almost as long as the car itself. Didn’t Bennie Hill write a song about him racing a milk cart?
It was only a matter of time before these loons popped their heads above the parapet:
Anti-vaccine activist Meryl Dorey has called on her 13,000 followers to breach new laws to socially isolate and take pictures of hospitals to prove the COVID-19 pandemic is fake.
Anthony Mundane has been making similar noises.
The antivaxxers should take a back seat and stay very, very quiet. This is what happens when there is no vaccine.
Victorian Labor Premier, Daniel Andrews “You Magnificent Bastard”, Mr Insider. A future Prime Minister if ever I saw one, we here in QLD are most impressed!
Right. The bonk ban, and the bans on fishing and hunting were strokes of genius. Only Xi would applaud those.
And yet, fellow, the good smart folk of Victoria keep voting him back in in droves. Looks like they “missed” your petty negatives, as well they should. The “big picture” here is what I alluded too in suggesting he IS Labors potential PM.
Cheers, keep safe as we.
Daniel Andrews has just instituted the dictionary definition of a police state: that which is not explicitly government-approved is illegal.
If you don’t live in Victoria, Henry, you’re welcome to take him off our hands.
Jack,
Excellent article.
I am generally in the “small government”camp but unfortunately this is the greatest crisis of public health since 1920 – and potentially the greatest economic crisis since the Great Depression.
Missteps aplenty but measures have to be taken to minimise the downside (the precautionary principle beloved of climate zealots) but this is a very real crisis of both health and economics.
To back up your comments on Italy, a town of an acquaintance in northern Italy has had an average deathtoll of 30 in the month of March over the last decade, but just recorded over 150 deaths last month. Many of those were not ascribed to COVI19 but were of those who dies in their own houses – undiagnosed. Those who died undiagnoes do not form part of the official figures, but that figure is startling to put it mildly.
On the other hand the draconian exercise of power by petty (and not so petty) bureaucrats is frightening.
The belated reversal of the golfing determination : that walking a course was “exercise” in NSW but walking a course while swinging a club was not exercise only lasted something under 2 days (but complete closure of courses for that time: Tuesday & Wednesday).
Tennis is not permitted (unclear why if the server retains his own ball/s), so all Council run tennis courts are closed…
Sydney CBD is a ghost town.
Until a vaccine or herd immunity occurs we are just slowing the rate of infection to cope – and the major hospitals are doing a great job: be grateful if all precautions and respirators are not required.
Loss of jobs and businesses is the longterm problem which the government is trying to mitigate, but runs into the usual missteps by it, rentseekers extraordinaire together with that unique Australian concept of fairness that somehow means everyone else should pay and focus on some individual who does not receive largesse as proof of failure of policy….
In all of this doom I must report that I am surprisingly pleased to rejoin the blog, and thank our host who also has vast and mysterious powers (my access to The Australian is restored after more than 3 weeks of neither hard nor soft copy despite payment).
From the bottom of what passes for my heart (approaching the bowels I guess), I thank his good graces….
To the rest of you: Gawd I never thought I would be so happy to see so many familiar nom de plums – adn even a few whom I know out of cyberspace!
Now might be a good time to remind people that less than one per cent of Australians have been tested. Figures confused somewhat because those who test positive face multiple tests.
Test per 100,000 people by country.
5,756 Iceland
2,252 United Arab Emirates. UAE
2,063 Bahrain
1,753 Norway
1,521 Switzerland
1,210 Hong Kong
1,100 Germany
1,081 Slovenia
1,025 Australia
1,013 Malta
You didn’t make two hours before picking a fight with me. Yes, this is an invitation only blog and you didn’t get one. You weren’t the only one. I don’t have the time or the energy to argue with you or arbitrate petty fights you invariably engage in. You want to post links, fine. Nothing else will be published. Stick to Twitter.
Can I give ten “thumbs up” to that!?!?
An illuminating Column indeed, Mr Insider. So much to comment on isn’t there.
Andrew Bolt last night suggested ScoMo had massively overreacted with his Mega Stimulus Packages, citing Australia’s low Death Rate etc.
Opinions are like the “proverbial s” of course and everyone has one but there is no doubt the Damage done to the Australian Economy already is a very concerning matter. We don’t seem to be just in a Financial Swan Dive, its more of a straight down Plummet.
Finally I do note my former “guru” Alan Jones did denounce COVID-19 as a Hoax then promptly shot down to his NSW Southern Highlands “bolthole” to Self Isolate. Some Egg on your face there Alan? Worse was Gerry Harvey who on 60 Minutes declared the Coronavirus “Good for Business”. Uppercut time there Gerry me OLD lad (hes 80yo, a bit senile methinks)
Cheers all from a very lovely QLD “Bolthole” if its good enough for Alan its good enough for me!
Jones was already at his Fitzroy Falls property when he made his ‘hoax’ remarks.
Which makes his Pronouncement even more stupid, Mr Insider. I note Jones has now modified his rhetoric and is now attacking the Chinese Regime for giving the World this ghastly Virus.
Strewth, the “Barry Back Flip” award goes to Alan Jones!
Morning all,
Well, Morrisson tells us that they will provide the forecasts in a few days. This will be either reassuring or else scare the shirkers into compliance . I suspect the latter.
Of the 27 deaths today 15 are linked to cruise ships. Not a happy statistic. Amusing that the cruiseline companies are reporting increased bookings for next year. What crap – almost like China’s virus numbers. Get real. This is because they have not offered refunds for the cancelled trips this year – only a credit on a future cruise, which the hapless passengers are more or less forced to take up or lose their money. In their place I’d rather lose my money than go on a Princess line ship – or any cruiseship actually. As you may have gathered, I don’t like ’em.
Stay safe xx
NZ modelling released yesterday. Predicts between 12600 and 33600 deaths. 6.8 per cent of 4.8 million population will require hospitalisation.