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Home / New Zealand

The Conversation: How should New Zealand manage Covid-19 from now – limit all infections or focus on preventing severe disease?

By Peter McIntyre, Helen Petousis-Harris, James Ussher, Joan Ingram
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6 Sep, 2022 11:53 PM6 mins to read

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As Covid numbers continue to decline the Government could look at easing mask mandates, but how many are still wearing them? Video / NZ Herald
Opinion

As the New Zealand government reviews mask mandates and other pandemic measures this week, we argue it's time to reconsider the overall Covid strategy.

With the arrival of Omicron, the pandemic landscape has changed worldwide. Omicron's latest BA.5 variant now dominates and, in the second half of 2022, most people in all countries have acquired immunity either from vaccination or infection, or both.

In countries like New Zealand, which are emerging from a "zero Covid" elimination strategy, governments must make the difficult transition to community transmission, particularly concerning managing expectations.

Masks may soon only be required in the most high-risk settings.https://t.co/cJooJE7zx0

— The Spinoff (@TheSpinoffTV) September 1, 2022
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On the one hand, a group of New Zealand public health experts recently advocated a sweeping package of measures in a strategy focused on minimising infection. This includes broadened eligibility for boosters, continued mask wearing in schools, and funds to support better ventilation and extended isolation if infected.

At the other end of the spectrum is an "immunity-driven" strategy, which prioritises the prevention of severe illness based on three considerations:

• with Omicron, even those adopting the most stringent avoidance measures can be infected;

• SARS-CoV-2, the virus that causes COVID-19, is here to stay and most people will encounter it multiple times throughout their lives;

• hybrid immunity from vaccination and infection is broader and more long-lived than either alone.

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Given these complexities, what are the uncertainties and trade-offs governments, the experts advising them and the public must balance? We argue it is time to focus on the prevention of severe disease – and here's why.

NZ compares favourably with other countries in the region

In June 2022, the World Health Organization (WHO) revised its global Covid-19 vaccination strategy. This included an aspirational goal of 100 per cent vaccination of healthcare workers and adults over 60.

New Zealand is close to this goal. For people over 65, two-dose coverage is above 95 per cent and first booster coverage is above 80 per cent. Fewer than 5 per cent of those eligible for their first booster are yet to receive it. For health care workers, booster doses remain mandatory so current employees have full coverage.

For people older than 65 and living in residential aged care, New Zealand achieved 89 per cent booster coverage by mid-February 2022. This headstart pre-Omicron is likely to be the most significant contributor to New Zealand's globally almost unique lower than expected total number of deaths from any cause in the two years before July 2022.

In stark contrast, other countries in the Asia Pacific region with similarly stringent non-pharmaceutical measures at the onset of Omicron had much higher excess mortality. This includes Australia, where booster coverage in aged care was below 10 per cent in January 2022.

It also includes Hong Kong, where less than 50 per cent of people over 70 had received two doses and suffered world-record death rates when Omicron hit; and Singapore, which has the world's highest two-dose coverage among children aged five to 11 (above 75 per cent) but 5 per cent of people over 80 remained unvaccinated in August 2022.

More than six months into the Omicron era, more than 80 per cent of New Zealand adults have received at least two doses of vaccine. This is among the top 25 countries worldwide. But significant coverage gaps remain for Māori adults under 50.

What about severe morbidity?

In France, during the Delta period, people with no other health conditions made up 50 per cent overall of 28 million with two vaccine doses. But they accounted for only 10 per cent of 5,345 hospitalisations and 2 per cent of 996 deaths due to Covid.

The highest risk of severe disease in two-dose recipients was among people in older age groups, post-transplant, on dialysis, and those living with cystic fibrosis, Down syndrome, mental disability or active lung cancer. Risk increased with each additional health condition and for people in poorer areas.

When Delta was prevalent, adults (especially people over 50) required a booster dose to maintain good protection. Post-Omicron, second booster doses supplemented by early use of antivirals and prophylactic antibody therapy substantially improves protection in fully vaccinated people still vulnerable to severe disease.

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What about younger, low-risk populations? In children and adolescents, the vaccine protects well against the low risk of severe disease. This direct protection should be the driver of vaccination, not transient reductions in infection in their household, school or community. We recommend regular reviews of the risk-benefit trade-offs for mask wearing in schools.

How to protect people from long Covid

Long Covid is a challenging topic, complicated by changing definitions, mixing of data from pre- and post-vaccine periods, and differences in age groups.

New research finds the risk of developing long Covid is substantially lower in the Omicron period overall. Long Covid is also substantially less common in fully vaccinated people, including healthcare workers. We do not yet have data about the risk of long Covid with hybrid immunity.

As New Zealand emerges from its Omicron peak, increasing hybrid immunity, and a good – albeit not perfect – toolbox to protect people at risk of severe disease, changes the risk-benefit balance from an indirect "minimising infection" strategy toward direct "maximising immunity" approaches.

It is time to discuss whether New Zealand is ready to measure the success of its Covid strategy by how well it prevents severe disease or wants to measure success by the number of infections of any severity. Making this decision requires a critical examination of the benefits, harms and cost-effectiveness of each approach.

This article is republished from The Conversation under a Creative Commons license. Read the original article.

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