How does Covid end?

‘Letting the virus rip, even in a highly vaccinated population, carries risks.’

By Laura Spinney Fri 29 Oct 2021 
https://www.theguardian.com/commentisfree/2021/oct/29/how-does-covid-end-uk-virus-endemic

Covid-19 has been described as a dress rehearsal for our ability to solve the 
bigger problem of the climate crisis, so it seems important to point out that 
the pandemic isn’t over.

The endgame has been obvious for a while: rather than getting rid of Covid-19 
entirely, countries will get used to it.

The technical word for a disease that we’re obliged to host indefinitely is 
“endemic”. It means that the disease-causing agent – the Sars-CoV-2 virus in 
this case – is always circulating in the population, causing periodic but 
more-or-less predictable disease outbreaks.

The virus won’t disappear – it will just become endemic. But it could still put 
pressure on health systems in years to come

No country has entered the calmer waters of endemicity yet; we’re all still on 
the white-knuckle ride of the pandemic phase.

In the pandemic phase, outbreaks are unpredictable and bad. There are simply 
too many people who remain susceptible to the virus, either because they’re 
unvaccinated or because they haven’t yet encountered the now-dominant Delta 
variant, which transmits even among the fully vaccinated.

The virus will find most of them eventually – even if it does not cause them 
all to become seriously ill.

Only when such pools of susceptibility have dried up can we say the pandemic is 
over, the infectious disease modeller Adam Kucharski of the London School of 
Hygiene & Tropical Medicine told me. From then on, the disease’s spread will be 
sustained by gentler forces such as the gradual waning of immunity in the human 
population, and the emergence of relatively mild new variants.

But nobody knows yet when that will happen, because there’s uncertainty about 
how long a person remains immune to Sars-CoV-2 following natural infection or 
vaccination, and about the virus’s capacity to generate variants that aren’t 
mild.

One thing is clear: the transition to endemicity will happen at different times 
in different countries and regions. It’s not unreasonable to think that the UK, 
with its high case numbers and vaccination rates, might be among those closest 
to the tipping point – which is why other countries are watching it closely.

Delta, which is around three times as transmissible as the original Wuhan 
variant of Sars-CoV-2, has yet to reach many countries, but since May it has 
been dominant in the UK, where it has spread like wildfire since “freedom day” 
on 19 July. That’s why some scientists think the UK is entering its final 
pandemic wave, from which it will exit into the endemic phase next spring.

Others think the pandemic has several more waves left in it, even in the UK. 
The waves may be smaller than in the past, especially since vaccines have 
broken the link between infection and hospitalisation to a large degree.

But Britons may still be facing another year or more during which vulnerable 
people die in large numbers, others report the debilitating effects of long 
Covid, and health systems creak and potentially crack under the strain.

Every country will eventually reach endemicity, but the UK is heading there 
very fast – and there will inevitably be a human toll to pay. Letting the virus 
rip, even in a highly vaccinated population, carries other risks too.

“The high case numbers in the UK at the moment can only increase the risk of 
emergence of variants of concern,” the modeller Robin Thompson of the 
University of Warwick told me.

We have yet to see a Covid variant that causes severe disease even in the fully 
vaccinated. Touch wood, we won’t.

Virologist Didier Trono of the Ecole Polytechnique Fédérale de Lausanne in 
Switzerland is cautiously optimistic that SARSars-CoV-2 is nearing the limits 
of its capacity to adapt.

Though new variants continue to emerge – such as AY.4.2, which recently started 
spreading in the UK – these have only been slightly more transmissible than 
Delta, at most, and the disease is not dramatically more severe now than it was 
in early 2020.

But as immunity grows in the population, so does the selective pressure for the 
virus to mutate and escape that immunity. Vaccinologists are working hard to 
prepare for this risk.

It’s a race to the finish, in other words, but a race that might not be won by 
the fastest. At this point, vaccines are protecting us individually, not 
collectively. But the form that the endemic disease will take will be shaped 
collectively.

The future of Covid-19 could be as mild as a common cold, but it could be 
worse. The response to this future disease may need to be more onerous than the 
response to flu, which involves only an annual vaccination campaign.

“I don’t think we can rule out a situation where Covid, though endemic, puts 
overwhelming pressure on health systems in some years,” Kucharski told me.

That’s why the pandemic is still very much a collective action problem, and why 
the coming wave – whether or not it’s the exit wave – should be met with masks, 
other light social distancing measures where and when required, and a high 
uptake of booster shots among those who are eligible.

The strategy has to remain as nimble as the virus, which also means ensuring 
that there is no trade-off between booster campaigns in wealthy countries and 
the rollout of initial vaccine doses in poorer ones.

Sars-CoV-2 may have been cornered, but it hasn’t been tamed; it still has 
plenty of bite in it.

Laura Spinney is a science journalist and the author of Pale Rider: The Spanish 
Flu of 1918 and How it Changed the World
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