“Famously, all the preparations and the plans that were in place were for a flu pandemic. Novel coronavirus, as we’ll come to when we talk about asymptomatic transmission, is different from even the previous coronaviruses, including SARS and MERS.”
Matt Hancock, the Health and Social Care Secretary for England
Did you know that the UK government modelled a coronavirus pandemic five years ago but kept the fact secret from parliament? This was discovered by a campaigning doctor through a Freedom of Information Act request.
There was a list released by Public Health England showing for the first time that 11 pandemic and epidemic preparedness exercises were carried out between 2015 and 2019. They included Exercise Alice, which in 2016 tested the country’s readiness to cope with the Middle East respiratory syndrome, caused by a coronavirus.
Moosa Qureshi, an NHS consultant haematologist, has been waging a legal battle for transparency since the pandemic broke out in early 2020. His battle for transparency led to the disclosure that the government had modelled an influenza pandemic in 2016. Apart from influenza and MERS, the other exercises modelled outbreaks of avian flu, Ebola virus disease, and Lassa fever.
Public Health England initially refused to answer requests for information on other modelling exercises on the grounds of national security. It was only after Qureshi asked for the decision to be reviewed that the list was released.
“The health secretary told parliament that Exercise Cygnus looked at UK preparedness for a flu pandemic, not other pandemics, but the truth is that he’s covering up multiple secret reports on preparedness for other pandemics, including a coronavirus pandemic. Politicians need to stop playing ‘Yes, Minister’ and understand that pandemic preparedness is improved by transparency and public scrutiny.”
There are other scientists from the medical field speaking out. Peter Openshaw, an immunologist and professor of experimental medicine at Imperial College London and a member of the government’s Nervtag committee, which advises on new and emerging respiratory virus threats, told The BMJ, “It does seem surprising that those exercises weren’t presented to scientific advisory committees. It would be interesting to raise it on Nervtag.”
David Matthews, a reader in virology at Bristol University, told the Guardian that the MERS exercise “Would have been completely relevant” to the government’s response to covid-19.”
A government spokesperson said, “We have always been clear that we undertake exercises regularly, both at a national and local level, as they are an essential part of assessing both our pandemic preparedness and planning for a wide range of scenarios. The lessons learnt from these exercises have contributed to our ability to rapidly respond to this unprecedented global crisis and continue to be considered by the government and a range of stakeholders, including expert advisory groups and local emergency planners, in reviewing pandemic response plans.”
I will say this again if we were so prepared for this pandemic, why is it that our world leaders all looked so stuck on stupid when the pandemic first occurred? What is the point of planning if you are not going to be prepared?