Please use this identifier to cite or link to this item: http://repositorio.ufla.br/jspui/handle/1/43149
metadata.artigo.dc.title: COVID-19 zugzwang: potential public health moves towards population (herd) immunity
metadata.artigo.dc.creator: Bhopal, Raj S.
metadata.artigo.dc.subject: COVID-19
Public health
Disease control
Population immunity
Herd immunity
Pandemic
Epidemic
metadata.artigo.dc.publisher: Elsevier
metadata.artigo.dc.date.issued: Nov-2020
metadata.artigo.dc.identifier.citation: BHOPAL, R. S. COVID-19 zugzwang: potential public health moves towards population (herd) immunity. Public Health in Practice, [S.l.], v. 1, Nov. 2020.
metadata.artigo.dc.description.abstract: COVID-19 is pandemic, and likely to become endemic, possibly returning with greater virulence. Outlining potential public health actions, including hygiene measures, social distancing and face masks, and realistic future advances, this paper focuses on the consequences of taking no public health action; the role of natural changes such as weather; the adverse public health consequences of lockdowns; testing for surveillance and research purposes; testing to identify cases and contacts, including the role of antibody tests; the public health value of treatments; mobilising people who have recovered; population (a synonym for herd) immunity through vaccination and through natural infection; involving the entire population; and the need for public debate. Until there is a vaccine, population immunity is going to occur only from infection. Allowing infection in those at very low risk while making it safer for them and wider society needs consideration but is currently taboo. About 40–50% population immunity is sufficient to suppress an infection with a reproduction number of about 1 or slightly more. Importantly, in children and young people COVID-19 is currently rarely fatal, roughly comparable with influenza. The balance between the damage caused by COVID-19 and that caused by lockdowns needs quantifying. Public debate, including on population immunity, informed by epidemiological data, is now urgent.
metadata.artigo.dc.identifier.uri: https://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S2666535220300306
http://repositorio.ufla.br/jspui/handle/1/43149
metadata.artigo.dc.language: en_US
Appears in Collections:FCS - Artigos sobre Coronavirus Disease 2019 (COVID-19)

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