Lancet editor attacks UK government for 'catastrophic' handling of Covid-19 pandemic
Missed opportunities and
appalling misjudgments by the government over its handing of the Covid-19 pandemic
have led to the avoidable deaths of thousands of people. That is the stark view
of Lancet editor Richard Horton in an interview in the Observer’s New Review
this week.
Horton – whose book, The
Covid-19 Catastrophe: What’s Gone Wrong and How to Stop It Happening Again –
lambasts the UK management of the outbreak, describing it as the greatest
science policy failure of a generation.
For good measure, Horton,
who has been editor-in-chief of the Lancet for 25 years, also attacks the
Scientific Advisory Group for Emergencies (Sage) for becoming “the public
relations wing of a government that had failed its people” and denounces Public
Health England (PHE) for not taking proper note of the World Health
Organization’s public health emergency warning about the disease. He also
dismisses the UK’s response to the emergence of the Covid-19 virus as “slow,
complacent and flat-footed”, a reaction that show the government was “glaringly
unprepared” for the pandemic.
Horton has been strident in
his denunciation of Britain’s political leaders and health chiefs since the
emergence of Covid-19 and now believes that to restore their damaged reputation
those individuals need to acknowledge their mistakes. “I think that’s going to
have to start with Sage, the chief scientific officer and the chief medical
officer being very clear that the signals were missed from January,” says
Horton. “Individually, they’re great people, but the system was a catastrophic
failure.”
Why did the UK take so long
to lock down, he asks, and why, despite all the warnings, first from China and
then from Italy, did we seem to be caught unawares by the speed and lethality
of the virus?
As editor of the Lancet,
Horton was responsible for publishing a series of five academic papers in
January that first described the novel coronavirus in detail and outlined
measures for combating the outbreak. Several papers talked about the importance
of personal protective equipment, testing, avoiding mass gatherings, school
closure and lockdowns. “All of the things that have happened in the last three
months, they’re all in those five papers.”




