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"There's always a risk of, as you get more circulation of the virus in the community, that you'll get enough accumulation of new mutations to get a variant substantially different than the ones we're seeing now."
Dr Anthony Fauci, Director of the National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases and the Chief Medical Advisor to the President - November 2021.
Let’s get imaginative. What could the worst possible covid outcome be? Roll time forward a couple of years and this could easily be happening...
What would the worst case covid scenario look like?
Picture this. You’re sitting at home, locked down, and this time things have got really scary out there.
Two years ago most of the world’s governments stopped updating their covid stats, and stopped revealing them to the public daily via the media. At the same time many countries dropped their traffic light and other public warning systems, leaving people uninformed and finding it a challenge to get the information they need to stay safe. It was understandable in a way. Everyone was bored silly of being locked down, fed up with wearing masks, and no longer willing to put up with restrictions around socialising.
The 2022 BA.4 and BA.5 variants caused waves but because fewer people were dying and fewer sent to intensive care, living with covid became the norm. Yes, loads of us caught it. Yes, lots of us were fairly ill. Yes, a lot of us got long covid, and many are still struggling to cope now, a couple of years later. But once a pandemic is normalised, it’s hard to persuade people the risk is still worth worrying about.
There we were, going about our business. Now and again a new variant popped up. We carried on as normal. Surges happened then faded away again. But eventually, in late 2023, thanks to millions of us around the globe catching the different variants of covid, passing them on, and therefore keeping the risk of a really nasty variant alive, the BA.100 omicron variant turned up. And the world changed within days.
It didn’t take long to pin down the original case of BA.100. A vulnerable woman who caught covid couldn’t recover. She was ill for weeks. As a result the virus morphed inside her body, eventually becoming different enough from all the other variants to be lethal.
‘Lethal’ in this case means the new variant kills 50% of the people it infects, whether or not they have any immunity from jabs or previous infections. And that makes BA.100 just as deadly as Ebola.
Now, people are genuinely frightened to go outdoors. There’s a mass rebellion amongst those who can’t work at home. Maybe their roles involve interacting with other people, perhaps they’re tasked with things like keeping the National Grid running, working in hospitals, serving in shops, delivering goods. Either way it doesn’t take long before the economy comes to a standstill.
The streets are deserted. No buses or trains are running, pubs and restaurants are closed. Because supermarkets only hold three days’ worth of food, people begin to panic...
Tell you what, let’s stop there. It’s too horrible to contemplate. We don’t need to say more. You get the picture. So how can we fix things?
All we need to do to bring the possibility of this nightmare closer is to keep ignoring variants, keep on allowing millions of people to get infected, take our hands off the vaccination steering wheel, and carry on like there isn’t a pandemic any more. And that is exactly what some countries are sliding towards.
At a time like this, we have to take responsibility for the future ourselves. It means taking a reasonable amount of care over yourself, those you love, and the people you employ. There’s no official guidance around covid safety measures to fight the latest wave, the extra-infectious BA.5 sub-variant, so we’re going to have to exercise common sense ourselves.
Common sense means fitting your premises with affordable covid-killing tech to keep employees, visitors, customers and suppliers safe. That’s what we do.
As a business owner who wants to play a part in the vital fight against new variants emerging, our machines help you minimise the risk. Let’s talk about fitting UVC covid killing units in your premises, whether it’s an office, shop, school, theatre, library, surgery or anywhere else people congregate indoors.