Stigmatising ‘super-spreaders’ won’t help the fight against coronavirus

  • 2/13/2020
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The idea that people who infect a large number of others are ‘culprits’ is scientifically flawed – and deeply unfair ew people believe any longer that illness is divine punishment for sin. But if you want to see signs that health is still considered today a moral affair, take a look at how we respond to epidemics like the coronavirus. The Brighton businessman identified as a “super-spreader” of the virus after he contracted it at a conference in Singapore is reported by the Times as feeling “very harassed” and “scared that [he’ll] become a scapegoat”. He is thought to have infected at least 11 people while travelling and socialising, before developing (mild) symptoms himself. It’s hard not to read the media emphasis on his role as a scout leader as an implication that he has carelessly endangered innocent children. “Super-spreader” is the buzzword of the day, and it is freighted with moral connotation. It sounds like anyone with that label has been recklessly putting it about. The term refers to someone who infects significantly more others than the average person who contracts the illness. That’s a necessarily vague definition, because being a super-spreader doesn’t in itself impute any specific behaviour, condition, or degree of contagiousness. Guardian Today: the headlines, the analysis, the debate - sent direct to you Read more There are many reasons why a disease may be transmitted from some infected individuals more than from others. Perhaps they simply come into contact with more people, for example because of their job or through travel. In other cases it’s a question of poorly understood biology: a virus may be present in higher levels in some people, or they might remain asymptomatic or infectious for longer. It’s true that certain behaviours, like coughing and sneezing in crowded public places, can exacerbate the risk of spreading, although there’s no clear evidence that preventative measures such as face masks help much, at least for coronavirus. And if you don’t (yet) have any symptoms, you have no obvious reason to take special precautions. Given all this, there’s no reason to attach any culpability to people identified as super-spreaders. “They haven’t done anything wrong,” says Nathalie MacDermott, a paediatrician and clinical researcher at King’s College London. But such appeals have the entire history of disease and medicine weighing against them. “Typhoid Mary” is one of the most notorious cases of blame and ostracism. An Irish cook working in the United States, Mary Mallon was a symptom-free carrier of the salmonella bacterium responsible for typhoid, who spent many years in enforced quarantine, the longest spell from 1915 until her death in 1938 – an extreme distortion of the word coined from the 40 days (Italian quaranta giorni) of isolation imposed on plague victims in the Middle Ages. The stigmatising of leprosy is now idiomatic, but that made such attitudes no less virulent during the emergence of Aids in the 1980s. There were “super-spreaders” of HIV too, and the impulse to pass moral judgement was never stronger. Even after it became clear (in the face of much ideological denial) that Aids was not exclusively a condition afflicting gay men, individuals who seemed to be hubs of the contagion network could be denounced for their sexual promiscuity. How to protect yourself from coronavirus Read more The coronavirus outbreak shows that we haven’t moved far beyond that culture of blame. “So who are likely to be the people spreading the disease?” asks the Daily Telegraph. “Here, we profile the 10 most likely culprits.” Among them are apparently “hair-flickers” (beware of young students!) and “lazy cleaners”. This Victorian view of cleanliness as moral virtue is exacerbated by careless language from specialists. “Imagine someone particularly lackadaisical who spreads the virus across everyone and every object,” one virologist has said. “They can be a super-spreader.” And of course so (we think) can a suspicious “foreigner”, as even British-born Chinese people are now finding to their cost. This too is an age-old story of xenophobia, long pre-dating the Telegraph headline from the 1980s warning of “African Aids ‘deadly threat to Britain’”. The very notion of contagion spreading by “germs”, first developed in the late 19th century by Louis Pasteur and Robert Koch, passed the blame from location – the presence of “bad air” (miasma) – to people, especially those “invading” and bringing exotic disease from beyond our borders just as germs invade the body. This is a delicate balance. After all, epidemiology does show that “super-spreading” can have a crucial impact in the early stages of an epidemic. But that doesn’t necessarily implicate individuals. Sylvie Briand, director of pandemic and epidemic diseases at the World Health Organization, has said: “We need to talk about super-spreading events and not people.” As is so often the case in medicine, however, experts, the public and media alike need also to reflect on how history and language condition our thinking.

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