Brighton:Because COVID symptoms fever, cough, aches are similar to flu symptoms, it is tempting to compare the two. Indeed, the UK's new health secretary, Sajid Javid, recently said: We are going to have to learn to accept the existence of Covid and find ways to cope with it just as we already do with flu. But have we picked the wrong disease to compare COVID-19 with? Outside of a pandemic, we accept that seasonal flu is an infection anyone might catch. We vaccinate only those who are particularly prone to complications and treat people with severe side effects, such as pneumonia.
Otherwise, people are left to go about their business. Global deaths from flu-related illnesses typically amount to around 400,000 each year. While we do need to find some way of living with COVID-19, the numbers suggest we're still a long way from being able to treat it in the same way. There have been over 180 million cases around the world since early 2020, and at least 4 million people have died from the disease. On top of this, we're not sure of the real effect of long COVID yet, but lasting symptoms are common, with one in ten people still experiencing illness 12 weeks after their infection. Currently, the health effect of COVID-19 across the population is much greater than the flu.
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We also know that COVID-19 is more infectious. We can be sure of this because, over the last 18 months, measures to control COVID-19 have reduced flu cases to almost none, but they obviously haven't been as effective at stopping the coronavirus from spreading. Cases were close to zero in the southern hemisphere during its winter in the middle of 2020 and again in Europe and North America between November 2020 and March 2021. Even in countries with high rates of COVID-19, such as South Africa and the UK, winter saw hardly any recorded cases of flu. All of this suggests that using methods typically used to combat flu will have quite a different effect on COVID-19. Treating COVID-19 like flu will result in many more cases and deaths, and much more lingering illness, than seen in a typical influenza season.
Another comparison
Of course, SARS-CoV-2 the virus that causes COVID-19 does share some characteristics with influenza viruses, which makes comparisons tempting. Around 20% of people have no symptoms at all when infected with SARS-CoV-2, and many people infected with a flu virus also don't get sick. Both viruses are prone to a lot of mutation. And with both diseases, older people and people with weakened immune systems are at a higher risk of severe illness than healthy young adults, with infections spreading rapidly in care homes, hospital wards and schools.