Medicine remains a pseudo-science

Lockdown: “a global policy failure of gigantic proportions” (according to the Institute of Economic Affairs).

A review recently published by the Institute of Economic Affairs found that Covid lockdowns failed to significantly reduce deaths.

This is supported by data from “The Economist” which estimated the number of excess deaths, from all causes, during the COVID-19 pandemic. 

“Excess deaths” measure the difference between how many people died during the pandemic, from any cause, and how many deaths would have been expected had there been no pandemic. The data show that lockdowns may have prevented only 1,700 deaths in England and Wales.  To put this into context, in a typical flu season, 18,500–24,800 flu deaths occur.  Thus, lockdown prevented a relatively small number of deaths, not the hundreds of thousands predicted by Imperial College of London’s modelling exercises (March 2020) that influenced government decisions about lockdown.    

During the COVID-19 pandemic, Sweden was among the few countries that did not enforce strict lockdown measures but instead relied more on voluntary actions and general advice. This approach faced fierce criticism.  However, available data on excess all-cause mortality rates indicate that Sweden experienced proportionately fewer deaths during the pandemic (2020–2022) than most high-income countries, including the UK, and was comparable to neighbouring Nordic countries.

It appears then that our heavily policed lockdown failed to significantly reduce deaths while imposing substantial social, cultural, and economic costs.

Yet, we all remember that almost daily, medical “experts” appeared in the media to urge adherence to ever more stringent restrictions and anyone who disagreed was practically excluded from the public debate. 

One lesson that needs to be learned is that while medicine might be more reliable than it was in the 19th century it remains a pseudo-science and “experts”, especially those who exude certainty, should not be blindly followed but need to be both rigorously questioned and challenged.

Lockdown and the Law of Unintended Consequences

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