22 November 2022, The Tablet

Covid choirs ban was flawed, says study



Covid choirs ban was flawed, says study

Members of the Together in Hope Project choir perform “The Stranger” in its world premiere at the Trondheim International Olavsfest in Trondheim, Norway, earlier this year.
CNS photo/courtesy Together in Hope Project

A new study has challenged health evidence that led to bans on choir practices and performances worldwide during the Covid-19 pandemic.

Choirs were effectively silenced after a health report into one of the first US Covid-19 outbreaks among a church choir in Washington, when 53 people who attended developed symptoms and the local health department concluded that one person who later tested positive — and who had shown signs of a cold beforehand — was probably the source of the infection.

Hundreds of scientific papers went on to quote the investigation, claiming that the March 2020 Skagit Valley Chorale rehearsal in Mount Vernon, Washington Presbyterian Church one of the pandemic’s first so-called super-spreader events.

Now a re-examination of the data by Brunel University London, Nottingham Trent University and Brighton and Sussex Medical School, which looked at the epidemiological curve, has revealed that in the majority of cases, infection occurred two to four days before the choir practice, showing Covid was already rife in the community.

“We show it is vanishingly unlikely that this was a single point source outbreak as widely claimed and on which modelling has been based,” says the study published in the journal, Public Health.

“An unexamined assumption has led to erroneous policy conclusions about the risks of singing, and indoor spaces more generally, and the benefits of increased levels of ventilation,” the study reports.

In the UK alone, there are more than 40,000 choirs and 2.14 million people sing regularly, according to figures from Voices Now, which lists the health benefits of community singing. Britain banned indoor singing in March 2020 and it was 18 months before the prohibition was finally relaxed.

TV choirmaster Gareth Malone, from BAFTA-winning reality series The Choir, said: “The outbreak in the Skagit Valley Chorale sent shockwaves round the singing world. I’m sure singers everywhere will welcome the fact that this is being looked at again. Singing with others is so good for us in so many ways, but some people are still fearful about singing because of Covid, and so it’s important that we are constantly re-evaluating the evidence.

“The Skagit County story is a good example of a familiar problem, where an early provisional, study gets taken for granted and cited without critical re-evaluation,” said Professor Robert Dingwall of Nottingham Trent University. “There are likely to be many similar cases out there and the scientific community needs to find better ways of detecting them, if policy mistakes are to be avoided.”

Led by public health infectious diseases specialist Professor Jackie Cassell from Brighton and Sussex Medical School, the team behind the new study is calling for the original claims to be re-examined.

“Ethically we think the original outbreak investigation should not [have] mentioned an index case,” said Brunel University London’s Dr Colin Axon. “That’s because everybody in that choir would know who the first person was. So mentioning it puts that person at risk, effectively saying they’re responsible for the death of their friends. That’s a massive and unacceptable moral burden.”

The public health department’s early findings, and the fear they generated, had a huge influence on UK Government policy around singing, explained music director and conductor, Sam Evans. “In May 2021, the Government planned to release many Covid restrictions as part of the ‘road map’. But singing was placed under continued restriction, because of a widespread belief at the highest levels that it presented a unique risk.This re-evaluation of the Skagit Valley Chorale outbreak shows that fear was unfounded.”

 


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