China tests entire city for virus as WHO slams herd immunity idea
China rushed Tuesday to test an entire city of nine
million within days after a minor coronavirus outbreak, as the WHO warned that
letting the pathogen run free to achieve herd immunity was "scientifically
and ethically problematic".
The virus is still spreading rapidly around the
world, with well over 37 million infections, and nations that had suppressed
their first outbreaks are now struggling with fresh surges -- especially in
some parts of Europe.
In the absence of a vaccine, governments are wary of
allowing the virus to spread unchecked, with China launching a sweeping drive
to test all residents of Qingdao after a handful of cases were detected on
Sunday.
"As of 8 am... our city has taken 3.08 million
samples for nucleic testing," the city's health commission said Tuesday,
adding that no new positive samples were found.
Chinese officials intend to test the entire city --
around 9.4 million people -- by Thursday.
In scenes contrasting with the fumbled testing
efforts of other nations, health workers in protective clothing swiftly set up
tents and residents queued deep into Monday night to provide samples.
In opposition to economically painful lockdowns and
social distancing, there have been proposals in some countries to let the
coronavirus circulate in the population to build up "herd immunity"
-- where so much of the population has been infected there are insufficient new
victims for the virus to jump to.
But the World Health Organization said such plans
were unworkable, and required mass vaccinations to work.
"Herd immunity is achieved by protecting people
from a virus, not by exposing them to it," WHO chief Tedros Adhanom
Ghebreyesus said Monday, describing the idea as "scientifically and
ethically problematic".
"Allowing a dangerous virus that we don't fully
understand to run free is simply unethical. It's not an option."
Further illustrating the challenge, a study
published in The Lancet Infectious Diseases journal indicated that exposure to
the virus may not guarantee future immunity -- and the second infection could
come with even more severe symptoms.
The pandemic has claimed more than one million lives
worldwide, and spurred breakneck efforts to develop vaccines and effective
treatments.
Some have made it to late-stage clinical testing,
but the optimism was dented Monday when Johnson & Johnson announced it had
temporarily halted its 60,000-patient trial because of an unexplained illness
in one participant.
There are ten firms conducting Phase 3 trials of
their candidates globally, including Johnson & Johnson.
The pharma giant has been awarded about $1.45
billion in US funding under Operation Warp Speed, championed by President
Donald Trump, who is keen for a political boost ahead of the November election
with a coronavirus breakthrough.
Critics have excoriated Trump for his handling of
the crisis, with more known infections and deaths in the United States than
anywhere else in the world.
Trump was sidelined from the campaign trail for 10
days after he got Covid-19, but returned to the stage Monday.
"I went through it and now they say I'm
immune... I feel so powerful," Trump told a cheering crowd in Florida, few
of whom wore masks.
His claim of immunity is unproven.
European nations are trying to contain new surges in
infections, and governments are rolling out tighter restrictions to avoid the
devastation of the earlier outbreaks.
Cases have soared in France, Germany, Poland, and
the Czech Republic in recent days.
And there has also been a spike in Britain, which
has the highest death toll in Europe.
He said businesses forced to close would get support
from the government, but his focus on shutting hospitality venues sparked
anger.
"Catastrophic, catastrophic," said Simon
Ashdown, owner of the Chepstow Castle pub in Liverpool.
"I don't think there'll be many businesses
after this lockdown."



