Tuesday, November 24, 2020

Disastrously bad so-called "science" at the World Health Organisation has caused over 1,300,000 avoidable deaths

The World Health Organisations's handling of the Covid-19 pandemic has been disastrous - it has caused over 1,300,000 deaths.


The fundamental failure of the World Health Organisation's pandemic policies, which are founded on the International Health Regulations (2005), is that they fail to recognise that when there is substantial cryptotransmission of a novel infective agent that in-country "Identify, Test, Trace and Isolate" measures won't work. 

At least the "Identify, Test, Trace and Isolate" strategy won't work in terminating an epidemic (except where preparations have already been put in place to separate infected, or potentially infected, individuals from the susceptible general population).

Why?

Because when cryptotransmission is substantial, the "Identify" element of the "Identify, Test, Trace and Isolate" tetraptych doesn't work.

You can't identify all those who are infected.

If you can't identify all those who are likely to be infected then you can't test those infected individuals that you have failed to identify.

If you can't test all infected individuals you won't be able to trace all their contacts, to some of whom they may have already spread the novel infective agent.

If you can't trace their contacts you can't isolate those infected individuals that you haven't tested or their contacts.

The whole strategy fails. 

Infection continues to be spread in-country by cryptotransmission.

The more cryptotransmission there is the more serious the effect of the failure of the "Identify" element of the "Identify, Test, Trace and Isolate" tetraptych.

Expressed colloquially, if you can't identify all those with the disease the "Identify, Test, Trace and Isolate" strategy won't work.

When the "Identify, Test, Trace and Isolate" strategy doesn't work (because of substantial cryptotransmission) then an infective agent with high transmissibility and moderate mortality will cause hundreds of thousands of deaths around the world.

The deadly spread of Covid-19 around the world demonstrates the truth of that assertion.

The International Health Regulations (2005) are not fit for purpose.

When a novel infective agent has moderate mortality, high transmissibility and substantial cryptotransmission - as the SARS-CoV-2 virus has - the deadly effects around the globe are entirely predictable. 

In 2005 the 58th World Health Assembly approved International Health Regulations that are predictably deadly when a novel infective agent has the characteristics of moderate mortality, high transmissibility and substantial cryptotransmission that the SARS-CoV-2 virus has.

The International Health Regulations (2005) need to be binned and replaced with International Health Regulations which are designed properly to protect global Public Health.




Monday, November 2, 2020

There was a global public health emergency on 7th January 2020

On 7th January 2020 Chinese scientists identified a new coronavirus, later named SARS-CoV-2, as the cause of an outbreak of pneumonia of unknown cause in Wuhan, China.

On 7th January 2020 a global public health emergency existed.

The global public health emergency was all the more dangerous because the World Health Organisation's pandemic strategy was incapable of responding properly to the identification of a new coronavirus like SARS-CoV-2 which had infected human beings.

The SARS-CoV-2 virus

  • Caused significant mortality
  • Was readily transmissible between human beings
  • Had significant cryptotransmission

It took another 23 days until the World Health Organisation's Emergency Committee formally recognised the global public health emergency as a Public Health Emergency of International Concern.

Worse still, on 30th January 2020 the World Health Organisation's Emergency Committee asserted that international travel and trade should not be interfered with.

The Emergency Committee stated,

"The Committee does not recommend any travel or trade restriction based on the current information available."

See

Statement on the second meeting of the International Health Regulations (2005) Emergency Committee regarding the outbreak of novel coronavirus (2019-nCoV) 

Later in the same statement the Emergency Committee stated,

"Under Article 43 of the IHR, States Parties implementing additional health measures that significantly interfere with international traffic (refusal of entry or departure of international travellers, baggage, cargo, containers, conveyances, goods, and the like, or their delay, for more than 24 hours) are obliged to send to WHO the public health rationale and justification within 48 hours of their implementation. WHO will review the justification and may request countries to reconsider their measures. WHO is required to share with other States Parties the information about measures and the justification received."

The message was clear.

The WHO didn't recommend any border controls and any country that implemented border controls had to report them within 48 hours to the WHO and could expect the WHO to shame them publicly if they couldn't prove that the border controls were necessary.

The WHO Emergency Committee was complying with the International Health Regulations (2005), at least as interpreted by WHO lawyers.

That decision of the WHO Emergency Committee in effect prohibited the only Public Health measure that could be expected to prevent a pandemic of Covid-19.

The Covid-19 pandemic has killed more than a million people and counting.

The World Health Organisation and its Emergency Committee are reponsible for those deaths.

There is an urgent need for radical revision of the International Health Regulations (2005) since they have caused over one million avoidable deaths from Covid-19.

 

Friday, October 23, 2020

The World Health Organisation's pandemic strategy was (and is) predictably deadly - Part 1

[Minor edits were made to his post on 2nd November 2020 to correct a few typos and aid clarity for the reader.]

The World Health Organisation's pandemic strategy was (and is) predictably deadly for any novel virus which causes significant mortality and has significant cryptotransmission.

The World Health Organisation's fundamentally flawed pandemic strategy has already caused a million avoidable deaths from Covid-19 and counting!

This series of posts seeks to explain why the WHO pandemic strategy is deadly and, with respect to Covid-19, why it has already caused more than a million avoidable deaths around the world.

To understand why those million plus avoidable deaths from Covid-19 have occurred we need to dip into International Law as well as consider virology and epidemiology.

This post, Part 1 of the series, addresses some of the International Law which provides the context to the functioning of the World Health Organisation, including the legal constraints on how the World Health Organisation may respond to a potential pandemic.

The key factor in the World Health Organisation's pandemic strategy causing more than a million avoidable deaths from Covid-19 comes from the application of the International Health Regulations (2005).

The International Health Regulations (2005) form part of International Law. 

There are reasons to question the legality of the International Health Regulations (2005) but such issues need not concern us here, since it is the interpretation placed on the Regulations by the World Health Organisation and its lawyers which have contributed to the million plus avoidable deaths from Covid-19.

The International Health Regulations (2005) exist in a wider context of International Law.

The World Health Organisation is an organ of the United Nations.

It was set up under Article 57 of the UN Charter:

Article 57

1.  The  various  specialized   agencies,  established  by intergovernmental  agreement and having wide international responsibilities, as  defined in  their  basic  instruments,  in  economic,  social, cultural,  educational,  health,  and  related fields, shall be brought into relationship with the United Nations  in  accordance  with  the  provisions  of Article 63.

2.  Such  agencies  thus  brought  into  relationship with the  United  Nations are hereinafter  referred  to as specialized agencies.

The UN Charter is available online here:

CHARTER OF THE UNITED NATIONS AND STATUTE OF THE INTERNATIONAL COURT OF JUSTICE

The Constitution of the World Health Organisation is here:

CONSTITUTION OF THE WORLD HEALTH ORGANIZATION

Article 21 of the WHO Constitution gives the World Health Assembly authority to create regulations in the following terms:

Article 21

The Health Assembly shall have authority to adopt regulations concerning:

(a) sanitary and quarantine requirements and other procedures designed to prevent the international spread of disease;
(b) nomenclatures  with  respect  to  diseases,  causes  of  death  and  public health practices;
(c) standards with respect to diagnostic procedures for international use;
(d) standards with respect to the safety, purity and potency of biological, pharmaceutical  and  similar  products  moving  in  international  commerce;
(e) advertising  and  labelling  of  biological,  pharmaceutical  and  similar products moving in international commerce.

In 2005 the 58th World Health Assembly made use of the authority to adopt regulations as expressed in Article 21 of the WHO Constitution and approved the International Health Regulations 2005.

A copy of the International Health Regulations (2005), as modified in 2016, is located here:

International Health Regulations (2005) Third Edition

The changes made in 2008 and 2016 to the International Health Regulations (2005) are not relevant to issues relating to the avoidable deaths from Covid-19.

The International Health Regulations (2005) set out in International Law how the World Health Organisation and its member states must act.

Article 1 of the International Health Regulations 2005 consists of several pages of definitions which govern the interpretation of the Regulations.

The seemingly innocuous Article 2 of the International Health Regulations 2005 is expressed in the following terms:

Article 2 Purpose and scope

The purpose and scope of these Regulations are to prevent, protect against, control and provide a public health response to the international spread of disease in ways that are commensurate with and restricted to public health risks, and which avoid unnecessary interference with international traffic and trade.

The effect of the final phrase, "which avoid unnecessary interference with international traffic and trade" is deadly.

It means that the World Health Organisation cannot act with respect to a developing pandemic unless that action has no effect on international traffic and/or trade or unless data has been collected which demonstrates that it is "necessary" to interfere with "international traffic and trade".

Notice too that the "public health response" is to "the international spread of disease".

That has the deadly effect that the WHO, as a matter of International Law (at least as interpreted by the WHO), CANNOT act in an effective way (which necessarily involves early interventions in international traffic and trade, as I will explain in a later Part of this series of posts) until a new disease has already spread internationally and data has been collected that demonstrate that a response is necessary!

Article 12 of the International Health Regulations (2005) illustrates how International Law constrains how the World Health Organisation can act.

I give the full text of Article 12 here to illustrate that complexity:

Article 12
Determination of a public health emergency of international concern

1. The Director-General shall determine, on the basis of the information received, in particular from the State Party within whose territory an event is occurring, whether an event constitutes a public health emergency of international concern in accordance with the criteria and the procedure set out in these Regulations.

2. If the Director-General considers, based on an assessment under these Regulations, that a public health emergency of international concern is occurring, the Director-General shall consult with the State Party in whose territory the event arises regarding this preliminary determination. If the Director-General and the State Party are in agreement regarding this determination, the Director-General shall, in accordance with the procedure set forth in Article 49, seek the views of the Committee established under Article 48 (hereinafter the “Emergency Committee”) on appropriate temporary recommendations.

3. If, following the consultation in paragraph 2 above, the Director-General and the State Party in whose territory the event arises do not come to a consensus within 48 hours on whether the event constitutes a public health emergency of international concern, a determination shall be made in accordance with the procedure set forth in Article 49.

4. In determining whether an event constitutes a public health emergency of international concern, the Director-General shall consider:
(a) information provided by the State Party;
(b) the decision instrument contained in Annex 2;
(c) the advice of the Emergency Committee;
(d) scientific principles as well as the available scientific evidence and other relevant
information; and
(e) an assessment of the risk to human health, of the risk of international spread of disease
and of the risk of interference with international traffic.

5. If the Director-General, following consultations with the State Party within whose territory the public health emergency of international concern has occurred, considers that a public health emergency of international concern has ended, the Director-General shall take a decision in accordance with the procedure set out in Article 49.

The decision to declare a Public Health Emergency of International Concern is personal to the Director General as stated in Paragraph 1.

However the Director General can only declare a Public Health Emergency of International Concern after following the procedure outlined in Paragraphs 2 to 4, including convening a meeting of the Emergency Committee.

This bureaucratic process takes time.

During that time a novel virus is allowed to continue largely unchecked. 

The disastrous effect of the International Health Regulations (2005) is that the WHO cannot declare a Public Health Emergency of International Concern until a novel virus has spread widely.

The effect of the International Health Regulations (2005) is that the World Health Organisation cannot, as a matter of International Law (as interpreted by the WHO), take effective action until a novel virus has already spread internationally.

The delay caused by the International Health Regulations (2005) means that for a virus like SARS-CoV-2 the optimal time for intervention has already passed.

The result, so far, is that more than a million deaths have occured from Covid-19 and that enormous avoidable damage has been caused to the economy worldwide.



Wednesday, October 21, 2020

Disastrously bad policy at the World Health Organisation has caused a million avoidable deaths and counting

 As I write this post the John Hopkins Covid-19 dashboard shows that Covid-19 has caused over 1 million deaths worldwide.


Those 1 million deaths and counting are all attributable to a disastrous policy at the World Health Organisation.

In future posts I will attempt to explain the reasoning that leads me to such a startling conclusion.




Wednesday, March 18, 2020

Three new blogs on the Coronavirus epidemic

Today I'm starting three new blogs relating to the Coronavirus epidemic.

The first blog, "Surviving Coronavirus" aims to focus on practical questions about how to stay safe and stay alive in a situation of radical uncertainty.

The second blog, "Surviving Boris", focusses on bigger picture issues relating to how Boris Johnson and those advising him have handled (and are handling) the Coronavirus epidemic.

This third blog is called "Corona Shock" and attempts to scratch the surface of understanding the profound, indeed revolutionary, impact of the Coronavirus epidemic on life across the planet.