"
The Hammer and the dance" article by Tomas Pueyo is rightly getting plaudits so I thought I'd summarise the key points.
View attachment 10263
The Hammer is the initial hard crackdown of strict social distancing needed to rescue countries that have lost control (also seen in Wuhan).
The author argues it shouldn't take that long to regain control, not if you do it properly (no sign of that happening in the UK). Perhaps 3-7 weeks.
The Dance is the follow-up when controls are intelligently relaxed, focusing on the things that really work. More like South Korea, which didn't resort to extreme social distancing.
In some ways this is similar to the Imperial College model, but with the inclusion of contact tracing and quarantining — you know, what WHO has recommended all along. And which doesn't seem to have been considered at all in the Imperial College model.
The central point about in the article is
the importance of buying time.
Pueyo’s idea is that if we can dramatically slow things down, there will be a learning curve which means we will find much better ways to treat the illness and also find the best ways to control contagion.
Better ways to treat it include time to get more ICU beds and respirators, more/better protection equipment so that more frontline medical staff can stay on the job, and better protocols. More radical would be effective drugs.
There are currently at least five clinical trials in progress for hydroquinone, a drug that is known to work on other viruses including other coronaviruses.
This
Carl Zimmer article in the New York Times today says scientists have found 69 candidate drugs to test. Researchers focused on human proteins that the coronavirus seems to need to enter and replicate in human cells. The team found 24 FDA-approved drugs currently used to treat unrelated diseases such as cancer, Parkinson's disease and hypertension.
They find another 45 drugs that are currently in clinical trials or the subject of early research. 22 of the 69 drugs are currently being tested against a live coronavirus grown in the lab.
Learning how better to stop contagion
We don't properly understand how the virus is spread, or what are the most effective ways are to stop it spreading. Extreme lockdown seems to work, but how much of that is actually needed? Hopefully, answers about that will emerge over the next few months as people try many different approaches around the world.
Overall, Pueyot argues that it should be possible to bring the epidemic under control and manageable within the health system with a Hammer approach to initially get control. Followed by a less extreme Dance approach to containing it at a low level until a vaccine or really good treatment emerges.
Plus the article has a pile of good data and interesting analysis about how the epidemic has developed around the world.