Justin Fox: How we got COVID’s risk right but the response wrong

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Early in March 2020, I decided to write about the risks posed by COVID-19. I have no background in epidemiology or even health journalism, but I can multiply, divide and make charts and was frustrated with the lack of quantification in most reporting and public-health messaging on what was soon to be declared a pandemic.

In the resulting column I took what seemed to be the most authoritative estimate of COVID’s per-infection fatality rate, 1%, and noted that this was about 10 times the 0.1% fatality rate of seasonal influenza, then conservatively multiplied a CDC estimate of 61,099 influenza-associated deaths in the U.S. in the pretty bad flu season of 2017-2018 by five and 10 to get a range of “300,000 to 600,000 deaths.”

Over the 12 months that followed, about 550,000 Americans died of COVID according to according to the CDC’s provisional estimates and 490,000 according to its tallies of the “underlying cause of death” listed on death certificates. Both are almost certainly undercounts, because in the early days the lack of testing meant many COVID-caused deaths were attributed to other maladies. My guesstimate was also more lucky than good in that actual seasonal flu fatality rates may be closer to 0.04%, and the 2017-2018 influenza toll has since been revised downward to 52,000. Still, it was in the ballpark.

I was reminded of all this while reading a passage in a new book on the history of the pandemic, “The Big Fail: What the Pandemic Revealed About Who America Protects and Who It Leaves Behind.”

In March 2020, the authors write, Stanford University health policy professor Jay Bhattacharya “coauthored an article for the Wall Street Journal questioning the validity of the scary 2 to 4 percent fatality rate that the early models like Neil Ferguson’s were estimating — and that were causing governments to panic. He believed (correctly, as it turns out), that the true fatality rate was much lower.”

Well, my 1% fatality rate estimate came from a Feb. 10 paper out of the MRC Centre for Global Infectious Disease Analysis at Imperial College London, then led by none other than Neil Ferguson. The March 24, 2020, Wall Street Journal op-ed by Bhattacharya and Eran Bendavid appropriately took aim at the 2% to 4% fatality rates that the World Health Organization was calculating using confirmed cases as the denominator, but ignored Ferguson’s estimate and went on to propose that the actual fatality rate might be as low as 0.01%, “one-tenth of the flu mortality rate,” and that in the U.S. COVID might be “a 20,000- or 40,000-death epidemic.”

Studies based on antibody testing later found that, in the early days, among hard-hit, immunologically-naive populations with age distributions like those of East Asia, Europe and North America, COVID killed close to 1% of those infected. Fatality rates seemed to be lower where incidence of the disease was lower (although measurement was less reliable there too), and they have certainly declined over time, especially since vaccines were introduced. But the very early estimate by Ferguson and team, described as “approximately 1%” in the summary of their paper but either 0.9% or 0.8% (depending on assumptions about how long people with COVID kept testing positive for it) in the text, appears to have been quite accurate, and certainly much closer to the mark than Bhattacharya and Bendavid’s spitballing.

It was also not an outlier in early 2020. “The data so far suggest that the virus has a case fatality risk around 1%,” well-informed amateur epidemiologist Bill Gates wrote on the New England Journal of Medicine’s website on Feb. 28. On the same day and in the same place, National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases director Anthony Fauci and the heads of the National Institutes of Health and the CDC wrote that the “case fatality rate may be considerably less than 1%,” and on March 11 Fauci testified before Congress that it was “somewhere around 1%.” A study published March 30 in Lancet Infectious Diseases, again co-authored by Ferguson, put it at 0.66% overall, albeit much higher for those 60 and older and much lower for those under 50, with the fatality rate for children under 10 estimated at less than 0.002%.

So it wasn’t a faulty expert consensus on the risks posed by COVID that drove the reaction to it. The expert consensus turns out to have been eerily on-target.

But as “The Big Fail” makes maddeningly clear — and no, I didn’t stumble over any other mischaracterizations in it like the one described above — the U.S. did an awful job of balancing COVID’s risks with the costs of fighting the disease. (I should disclose that the authors, Joe Nocera and Bethany McLean, are former colleagues of mine and current friendly acquaintances, although we’ll have to see if the latter holds up after they read this column. Something I wrote comparing COVID mortality in California and Florida is cited approvingly in the book.)

The “lockdowns” at the outset of the pandemic — which in the U.S. were mostly not literal lockdowns but did involve strongly urging people to stay home — seem to have saved lives when implemented early enough. It is also undeniable that staying away from other people is an effective way to avoid catching or spreading COVID.

But public policies aimed at encouraging and even requiring such behavior over extended periods were extremely costly and disruptive, and appear to have had at best a modest impact on COVID mortality.

The biggest mismatch between risks and costs in the U.S. involved schooling, as many urban districts did not offer in-person classes for much or all of the 2020-21 school year, with dire consequences for student performance.

How much of a role did misrepresentations of COVID’s mortality rate play in this faulty decision-making? It can’t have helped that the WHO and other data compilers continued throughout the pandemic to report fatality rates based on confirmed case numbers, which the news media usually passed on without adding context. But I also think that a disease with a mortality rate of a bit under 1% is just really hard for people, myself included, to get their heads around. It’s in an uncomfortable middle ground between seasonal viruses that we’ve all grown accustomed to living with (as now seems to be happening with COVID) and high-fatality-rate ones such as Ebola and the original SARS virus that no one would encourage allowing to spread. The conservative meme that “COVID is 99% survivable” — as if that made it a mere trifle — was one indication of this confusion, but Fauci’s waffling over the course of summer 2020 on whether schools should reopen probably was too.

It didn’t help that some of those clamoring loudest for school reopening, such as President Donald Trump, so clearly underestimated COVID’s risks. An underappreciated reason why the October 2020 ” Great Barrington Declaration” calling for an end to lockdowns generated such an allergic reaction in public health circles is that two of its three authors, Bhattacharya and University of Oxford epidemiologist Sunetra Gupta — who in May 2020 argued that COVID “has largely come and is on its way out” in the U.K., with a fatality rate between 0.1% and 0.01% — had been so spectacularly wrong in their early risk assessments. These were not people who had earned a lot of credibility on COVID.

It seems telling — or at least ironic — that Sweden, where public health officials greatly overestimated how quickly COVID was spreading early on and thus underestimated its fatality rate, ended up with one of the most successful and sustainable COVID management efforts among Western countries.

Sweden’s approach was never as laissez-faire as sometimes portrayed — high schools and universities were closed early in the pandemic and large gatherings banned — and the initial increase in deaths there was even sharper than in the U.S., but over time the country’s light-touch policies were accompanied by excess mortality only moderately higher than in neighboring Denmark and Norway and much lower than in the U.S. and the rest of Europe. Getting the risks right may not have been essential to getting the response right.

Justin Fox is a Bloomberg Opinion columnist covering business. A former editorial director of Harvard Business Review, he is author of “The Myth of the Rational Market.”

Giants hiring former Red Sox catcher as new manager, but not Jason Varitek

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The San Francisco Giants are filling their managerial vacancy by replacing one former Red Sox player with another.

After firing Gabe Kapler with three games left in the regular season, Bob Melvin will leave San Diego for San Francisco. The Athletic’s Andrew Baggarly broke the news on Tuesday afternoon, two days after the outlet reported the Padres had granted the Giants permission to interview Melvin, who had one year remaining on his contract.

Melvin, who turns 62 this week, only managed in San Diego for two seasons, but his departure isn’t exactly a surprise. Increasing tensions between him and general manager A.J. Preller made headlines throughout the 2023 season; that the Padres were willing to let a National League West rival interview and hire their manager indicates a manager-GM relationship eroded to the point of no return. Preller will now search for his seventh Padres manager in nine years.

It’s also a homecoming for the three-time Manager of the Year, who grew up in the Bay Area and managed the Oakland A’s from 2011-21. In 20 seasons as a Major League manager, Melvin has a 1,517-1,425 record, with eight trips to the postseason.

Melvin, who caught for the 1993 Red Sox during his 11-year playing career, wasn’t the only former Red Sox catcher interviewed for the Giants gig. The year Melvin played in Boston, the Minnesota Twins drafted a star catcher who opted to finish college and re-enter the draft in 1994. The Seattle Mariners made an identical selection in 1994, and in 1997, traded a young Jason Varitek to Boston.

Varitek has been on the managerial track for most of the last decade, with the Mariners interviewing him in 2015. The longtime Red Sox captain is a year into a three-year contract extension as a member of the coaching staff, but the club granted the Giants permission to speak with him, which they did by phone last Friday.

“He will manage in the big leagues,” Alex Cora told reporters in February 2021, after Varitek became a full-time member of the coaching staff. “I think, with time, somebody’s going to give him a chance and he’s going to kill it, he’s going to be great.”

 

Conley’s Corner with Timberwolves guard Mike Conley: chasing an NBA championship

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EDITOR’S NOTE: Mike Conley is one of the best sources of information in the NBA. 

Entering his 17th NBA season, the 36-year-old Timberwolves point guard has seen it all, and has the knowledge and willingness to explain what’s taken place and what’s to come with the media and, thus, the fans. That breadth of insight and analysis extends from the on-court Xs and Os to team dynamics and development. 

Conley is just as good at explaining why two teammates came to blows in the middle of a timeout as he is on what the team needs to do to decode a switch-heavy defense.

So who better to sit down with twice a month to tackle different topics ranging from the Timberwolves to the league at large to, well, Mike Conley, than Conley himself.

This is the second installment of Conley’s Corner.

CHASING A CHAMPIONSHIP

It determines his diet. It’s the reason he uses spare moments around his house to stretch. It’s why he’s constantly thinking of ways to improve his game and better prepare himself for the next day.

Winning an NBA championship is not at the forefront of Mike Conley’s mind on a daily basis.

But the point guard admitted it has “unconsciously” impacted his lifestyle.

“That’s stuff you do thinking about a championship,” Conley said. “Ultimately, it runs my life.”

Entering his 17th NBA season, the lack of a title is the one hole remaining on Conley’s illustrious basketball career resume. He prescribes to the theory that his career wouldn’t quite be complete without a championship, only because that’s how he’s always viewed the game.

“That’s exactly how I felt since I came into the league. My whole mindset was championship. I want to be one of those guys that has a ring one day, has multiple. That kind of career is what you think of as a kid,” Conley said. “I haven’t wavered from that. That’s been my only goal, in a sense. And everything in between is cool — individual accolades are cool, contracts are cool, but the kid part is still in me, like, ‘Man, I just want to win the big game.’ ”

That ultimate goal means more now than ever before. Conley’s children have reached the age where they are very into dad’s profession, and his team’s success. Conley said if you watched his kids during the team’s preseason game against Maccabi Ra’anana, “you could’ve thought it was Game 7 of the NBA Finals.”

“They were super into it,” he said. “They love just being around it — being around the game, the people and fans and stuff — but they’re starting to love basketball and watching dad play.”

How cool it would be for them to see him lift a trophy at season’s end. There have only been a handful of times in Conley’s career where he’s entered the season thinking that was a legitimate possibility.

This is one of them.

“I honestly feel like this team, and the way the NBA is set up — the parity that’s come out — it’s more open and there’s more opportunity for more teams than usual, so why not (put) us in that category?” Conley said. “I feel like we’ve got a good chance to make those jumps to hopefully get to that point.”

The Timberwolves, while receiving credit as a potential top-four seed in the Western Conference, haven’t really been mentioned as a title contender by prognosticators entering the season, which opens for Minnesota on Wednesday in Toronto.

But Conley noted the Timberwolves have a roster — No. 1 through No. 15 — with the talent, length, athleticism and depth to go out and compete on a nightly basis.

“You’ve got young superstars in Ant and KAT and Rudy. You’ve just got a good mix of people’s games together. And you’ve got a little bit of that continuity, too, having a lot of guys returning,” Conley said. “And Coach (Chris) Finch, you’ve got to have a guy that can lead the ship and manage these guys and the egos and all things that come with the NBA lifestyle and game.”

He hopes the Timberwolves can stay healthy and mesh together at the right time. Those are two key factors in winning a title. Health has stood in the way of a couple of Conley’s best chances to claim a ring.

In 2015, Memphis took on Golden State in the Western Conference semifinals. The Warriors won Game 1, which Conley missed with a facial fracture. But the point guard returned for Game 2, which Memphis stole in Oakland. The Grizzlies claimed a 2-1 series advantage after Game 3. But Memphis lost star defender Tony Allen to a hamstring injury in Game 4, and didn’t win another game in the series.

“It was hard to guard Klay and Steph (without him),” Conley noted.

Then in 2021, Utah sported the best regular-season record in the Western Conference. But Conley, an all-star that season, aggravated a hamstring injury in Game 5 of the Jazz’s first-round series victory. He missed the first five games of the conference semifinals against the Clippers, only to return in Game 6, which Los Angeles won to claim the series.

“I played the sixth game at like 40 percent. I was like, ‘I’ve got to try it.’ But at that point, it was like, ‘Man, if I was healthy from that first game on, man, we were rolling.’ So we had a real chance. A lot of us talk about it,” Conley said. “It was wide open. We were like, ‘We can do this thing.’ And then that injury just hit at the worst time.”

Which happens to many teams each season. All you can continue to do is give yourself as many bites at the apple as possible in hopes of eventually breaking through.

Denver was probably the healthiest team in last year’s playoffs. When you combine that with the Nuggets’ talent level and overall quality of play, it’s a championship recipe. The Timberwolves, meanwhile, were decimated by injuries prior to and during their first-round series with the Nuggets. But Minnesota — Conley included — took a number of positives away from the challenges it presented to Denver.

That seems to be the root of much of the optimism surrounding the team this fall. Conley is encouraged by the actions everyone is putting behind that belief.

“I think that everybody has kind of taken it upon themselves for a little bit more accountability on their side to be better at the smaller things,” he said. “This team last year, from my perspective, we had times where it looked like we couldn’t be beat. And then there were moments and quarters where it was like, ‘What are we doing? We don’t know how to pass, we don’t know how to shoot.’ So I think having less of those moments comes with the attention to detail. … You’re just seeing it … guys are just paying more attention to it.”

But there will be trials and tribulations. There always are throughout the course of a season. Conley noted it’s how you handle those that determine your fate.

“It’s the ability to go on a two- or three-game losing streak, snap out of it and have team meetings, talk to each other. The media is tackling you and trying to split you apart, and you band together and have moments in the season that become those signature moments that you can look back at and say, ‘Hey, this is when they became who they were,’ ” Conley said. “And then, boom, it pops. I think a lot of teams go through that stage and they figure it out. We’re a team that I think we check some of those boxes — we’ve got the talent, we’ve got the bodies, we’ve got the depth — but can we withstand adversity? Can we get through it when things go rough?”

It’s all to-be-determined, but the 36-year-old floor general is excited to find out. A year ago at this time, he was the point guard for a rebuilding Utah team that traded away its two premier players in the offseason. Title contention was not on the menu for that team. And it was fair to wonder if Conley would ever again be in such a position again.

“Yeah, at that time, I honestly had kind of switched my mindset to just enjoying the game, you know what I mean?” Conley said. “I love to hoop, just as it is, so I get to go out here and just hoop every day. So I’m not going to trip if we’re winning 40 games or 60 games, if we’re in the playoffs or not. But I’m going to try to win and get this team into the playoffs. I’m not going to just sit here and lose. … That was kind of my mindset. Go out there, have fun and hoop. Be the best we can be and see what happens.”

That still is his mindset to a large degree. He goes into each day with a big smile on his face, eager to grow, improve and enjoy the game.

“I’m still out here with the guys, I’m doing something that not a lot of people get to do. Not only that, we’re working towards something — playoffs, Western Conference finals, championship aspirations — all these aspirations that we have together as a team,” Conley said. “That just kind of gets me up in the morning. Like, man, I’ve got something to reach for right now. It’s really cool.”

Past editions of Conley’s Corner:

‘Old Guy’ has still got game

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Documents reveal new horror in case of Duxbury mother accused of killing her 3 kids

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The Plymouth District Court has unsealed nearly 300 pages of records disclosing investigative efforts behind a Duxbury mother’s alleged murder of her three young children just two days ahead of her Superior Court arraignment on those charges.

Lindsay Clancy, 33, is accused of strangling her three children with exercise bands in the basement of their home at 47 Summer St. in Duxbury the night of Jan. 24 before jumping out of a window in an apparent suicide attempt.

Affidavits released Tuesday state that she also cut her wrists and neck before jumping from the second-floor window.

Plymouth DA Timothy Cruz issued an arrest warrant for Clancy the next day as she lay in Brigham and Women’s Hospital in Boston being treated for her injuries. She was charged in Plymouth District Court on Feb. 7 via video feed from her hospital bed.

A Plymouth grand jury indicted her on Sept. 15 with three counts of murder and strangulation for the deaths of Cora, 5; Dawson, 3; and Callan, an infant. Clancy will be arraigned in the county Superior court on Thursday morning, once again from her hospital bed but this time from Tewksbury Hospital.

“In the present case, the court finds that the defendant’s physical and mental condition presents an overriding interest to schedule the arraignment at the Tewksbury Hospital,” Superior Court Judge William F. Sullivan wrote in a Tuesday filing announcing the arrangement, adding that the patients there be afforded privacy, so public access to the proceedings would be done by digital telephony.

New details

The cache of previously impounded documents include 11 search warrant applications, along with their findings. Tthe earliest affidavits included were previously impounded, DA Cruz wrote in a Jan. 25 filing, because “the public disclosure of the facts contained herein may compromise the investigation.”

Among the new details:

Duxbury police dispatched all cruisers to the Duxbury home at 6:11 p.m., where responders found Lindsay Clancy on the ground to the left side of the house. As police were assessing Lindsay Clancy, her husband Patrick Clancy went inside to check on the children. Soon, the police radios broadcast that “Mr. Clancy was in the basement and something as wrong because his children would not wake up.”

Patrick Clancy would begin screaming and tell an arriving officer that “She killed the kids.” The first police officer affidavit then describes a hellish scene of discovering the kids — Dawson on his back in one room, Cora and Callan in another, bands around their necks and “blue and purple” in the face — in the basement and the life-saving efforts of the first responders.

Police conducted a full search of the home on Jan. 25 and recovered many items including: a series of home cameras; a receipt from ThreeV, which is the restaurant where Patrick Clancy went to pick up dinner Lindsay Clancy had ordered that night; a CVS bag with children’s laxative in it that Lindsay had told Patrick to pick up; a bloody knife; laptops, tablets and hard drives; the three exercise bands — yellow, black and blue; swabs from red-brown stains from several areas; some clothing; as well as a notebook.

This is a developing story.