It Was A Mistake To Close Schools, UK Study Concedes
It Was A Mistake To Close Schools, UK Study Concedes
by Tyler
Durden Wed, 11/11/2020 - 02:00
Authored by Jeffrey Tucker via The American Institute for Economic
Research,
On March 12, 2020, the memo went out from the pen of Carter Mecher, bioterrorism expert at advising the Veterans Administration. It went out to public health officials and others from around the nation. Close the schools. Pull the trigger now. And it happened, and with it, civic freedoms we have long taken for granted – freedom to travel, operate businesses, go to the movies, even leave our homes – were taken away.
They shut the schools. Then it was like dominos falling, one by
one. The businesses had to close so that people could watch the kids
at home. The shopping centers had to close because otherwise the kids would
just gather there. The churches too. Entertainment venues were shut. Even parks
closed. The stay-at-home orders followed from the school closures. In many
ways, the whole legitimacy of lockdown hinged on the merit of the school
closure.
A small group of pro-lockdown scientists cheered, as their
decade-and-a-half-old dream of conducting such a social experiment was
finally becoming a reality.
The school closures had a disproportionate effect on working
women. They left their jobs to care for the kids, attempting to
help them navigate the strange new world of Zoom classrooms and do assignments
via email. Men stayed working in jobs as the primary breadwinners.
As the Washington
Post reports:
The pandemic recession [lockdowns] has been dubbed a
“she-session” because it has hurt women far worse than men. The share of women
working or looking for work has fallen to the lowest level since 1988, wiping
out decades of hard-fought gains in the workplace.
On Friday, the Labor Department’s jobs report showed that the
economy has gained back just over half of the jobs lost in March and April, but
the situation remains dire for women. There are 2.2 million fewer women working
or looking for work now than in January, vs. 1.5 million fewer men, according
to the Labor Department data.
In nine months of this hell, one might suppose there would have
been a clear test of whether and to what extent severe outcomes from catching
the virus were really associated with school attendance. It has finally
arrived, and the news is not good for the lockdowners.
It is by now obvious (and has been since February) that almost no children are in danger from the
virus. The age/health gradient of the virus affects almost
exclusively the elderly with comorbidities. The children might have been
helpful in achieving good public health goals and burning out the virus, rather
than losing almost a full year of quality schooling thus far, to say nothing of
the trauma of mandatory masks and being taught that their friends are
potentially pathogen-carrying enemies.
The kids would have been fine but what about the staff and adults? Does
locking up the kids in homes really keep people safe and dial back the
infectiousness and mortality associated with SARS-CoV-2? How might one test
this? One simple way could examine the difference in disease outcomes between
domestic environments in which kids are present versus those where they are
not.
This seems like an obvious test. Finally just such a study has
appeared, as released by the prestigious medical journal Medxriv:
“Association between living with children and outcomes from COVID-19: an
OpenSAFELY cohort study of 12 million adults in England.”
It is the largest study yet conducted (35 authors) of Covid risk
to adults from contact with children, and it has a
not-so-surprising conclusion, at least for those who have followed the science
so far.
It discovered no
increase in severe Covid-related outcomes for adults living with children.
It demonstrated a small increase in infections but without bad outcomes. In fact, the study demonstrated fewer deaths
associated with adults living with children at home than home without
children.
To quote from the study directly:
This is the first population-based study to investigate whether
the risk of recorded SARS-CoV-2 infection and severe outcomes from COVID-19
differ between adults living in households with and without school-aged
children during the UK pandemic. Our findings show that for adults living with
children there is no evidence of an increased risk of severe COVID-19 outcomes
although there may be a slightly increased risk of recorded SARS-CoV-2
infection for working-age adults living with children aged 12 to 18 years.
Working-age adults living with children 0 to 11 years have a lower risk of
death from COVID-19 compared to adults living without children, with the effect
size being comparable to their lower risk of death from any cause. We observed
no consistent changes in risk of recorded SARS-CoV-2 infection and severe
outcomes from COVID-19 comparing periods before and after school closure.
What does this imply?
Our results demonstrate no evidence of serious harms from COVID-19
to adults in close contact with children, compared to those living in
households without children. This has implications for determining the
benefit-harm balance of children attending school in the COVID-19 pandemic.
The wording seems a bit abstract, consistent with the genre of
this style of writing. To
put it in English, fear of bad Covid outcomes was never a good reason to shut
the schools. Which is to say: this was a huge mistake. It
is shocking to consider what has been lost, how the children have been treated,
how brutalized are the parents who have paid so much in taxes or in private
school tuition. It is robbery not only of money but also of education and the
good life.
AIER has in general agreed with John Ioannidis’s claim from mid-March. These
policies were put into place with no solid evidence that they would mitigate
the virus or improve on medical outcomes.
From the beginning, the lockdowns were a policy in search of a
rationale. In all these intervening months, none has been
forthcoming. And we are only now seeing the solid research proving that the
skeptics were correct from the beginning. The only question now is whether and
when the “experts” that produced this astonishing failure will admit their
error. Perhaps the answer is: when the media start reporting on it.
https://www.zerohedge.com/medical/it-was-mistake-close-schools-uk-study-concedes
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