drdel
Tour Rookie
Actually, an effective and brutal lockdown would go some way to eradicate the virus. If it can't propagate, it dies. If it can't transmit, it can't propagate.
Treatments are only part of the answer. Dexa is only useful if you are on oxygenation, and even then the cure rate is modest. Remdesivir is turning out not to be the magic bullet some thought it was, the regeneron antibody cocktail is likewise showing some issues and is very expensive and not scalable. There is no early intervention treatment known to meaningfully reduce the risk of reaching ICU.
Vaccination is the biggest weapon, but current JCVI proposals are to not vaccinate everyone, only those over 50 or care home/NHS workers, and vulnerable people. That leaves a lot of people capable of experiencing serious morbidity uncovered. The policy is clearly still a herd immunity lite (that dare not speak its name) approach.
This thing has a long way to run yet, and Lockdown III is likely in early 2021 after a Christmas shopping/party/kids coming back from Uni surge kicks in.
There is no 'effective lockdown against a pandemic which is present within the international community? Eradication will be only potentially possible with vaccination programmes.
It will depend on the value countries put on life. Notional values vary with age, earning potential and infirmity. There is wide disagreement but an average of about £1.5m is common. It may rise to £4m in some evaluations.
Kidnappers, for example, take a view on what the 'market' will bear.
Distasteful as it may seem but it comes down to money in the end.
Luckily for us we expect politicians to shoulder that responsibility, which will always be open to criticism. Expecially if the 'life' involved is close socially.