Controversial Herd Immunity Plan Finds Supporters In Trump Administration
White House advisers are reportedly embracing the theory of allowing COVID-19 to spread in young populations while protecting older people, despite announcements from the NIH calling the approach dangerous and from WHO saying it is unethical and unrealistic.
The White House has embraced a declaration by a group of scientists arguing that authorities should allow the coronavirus to spread among young healthy people while protecting the elderly and the vulnerable 鈥 an approach that would rely on arriving at 鈥渉erd immunity鈥 through infections rather than a vaccine. Many experts say 鈥渉erd immunity鈥 鈥 the point at which a disease stops spreading because nearly everyone in a population has contracted it 鈥 is still very far-off. Leading experts have concluded, using different scientific methods, that about 85 to 90 percent of the American population is still susceptible to the coronavirus. (10/14)
Maverick scientists who call for allowing the coronavirus to spread freely at 鈥渘atural鈥 rates among healthy young people while keeping most aspects of the economy up and running have found an audience inside the White House and at least one state capitol. The scientists met last week with Health and Human Services Secretary Alex Azar and Scott Atlas, a neuroradiologist who has emerged as an influential adviser to President Trump on the pandemic. (Achenbach, 10/13)
The head of the World Health Organization warned against the idea that herd immunity might be a realistic strategy to stop the pandemic, dismissing such proposals as 鈥渟imply unethical.鈥 At a media briefing on Monday, WHO Director-General Tedros Adhanom Ghebreyesus said health officials typically aim to achieve herd immunity by vaccination. Tedros noted that to obtain herd immunity from a highly infectious disease such as measles, for example, about 95% of the population must be immunized. (10/12)
Coronavirus task force member Dr. Scott Atlas and Sen. Rand Paul have misleadingly suggested that much of the U.S. population has immunity to the coronavirus due to previous exposure to similar viruses. But scientists say any possible protection is theoretical 鈥 and can鈥檛 be relied upon to control the pandemic. (McDonald, 10/13)