The Olympics Could Be a Covid-19 Super-Evolutionary Event
Ten days before the opening ceremony of the Tokyo Olympics, Kara Lawson, the coach of the United States womenâs 3x3 basketball team, gave a press conference. The sport is new to the Olympics this year, and Lawson, a former WNBA player and coach at Duke University, told the dozen or so reporters participating online what she liked about itâ"the game is faster-paced, Lawson said, and more unpredictable than the five-on-five version. But during a global pandemic, Lawson added, the health of her players was her number one priority. âWeâre obviously tested daily. Iâm actually quarantined in my room right now,â Lawson said. âWeâre masked all the time ⦠a positive test at this juncture is hard for any team getting ready to go to Tokyo. Weâre focused on doing our part, not just so we can have a good competition, but we definitely feel a responsibility to fellow human beings to be smart about eliminating transmission of the disease worldwide.â
Less than a week later, one of Lawsonâs playersâ"Katie Lou Samuelson, a power forward for the Seattle Stormâ"announced on Instagram that she had tested positive for Covid-19 and wouldnât be able to go to Tokyo. Fast-paced, maybe, but not exactly unpredictable. As the 2020 Tokyo Games get underway, Samuelson is one of 91 people either in Tokyo for the Olympics or who were hoping to go whoâve tested positive for the disease, including US tennis player Coco Gauf, a beach volleyball player from Czechoslovakia, two South African soccer players, and so on.
The spirit of âOlympismâ is supposed to ward off worldly concerns. The riders of the Apocalypse may stalk the globe, but theyâre not allowed into an Olympic Village. War gets postponed, Famine withers in the dining hall, and Pestilence ⦠well. The global pandemic has killed at least 4 million people and resulted in a very strange Summer Gamesâ"no cheering crowds, athletes essentially confined to quarters when theyâre not going faster, higher, or strongerâ"all in an attempt to prevent the disease from spreading among the competitors and to the people of Japan, and to keep the Olympians from carrying new strains of the virus back to their home countries. The Olympics are one of Earthâs great symbols of international cooperation, but this year the Games are also a mass gathering in the middle of the worst pandemic in a century, where people from nearly every country on Earth will gather in a vast congregate living setting and compete in some close-contact sports, sometimes indoors. What could possibly go wrâ"
The story of disease is also a story of mass gatherings. In 1867, a cholera outbreak started at the Kumbh Mela in India, the worldâs largest religious gathering. It spread from the banks of the Ganges to Russia and Europe. A million people died. Over the years, the Hajj pilgrimage has been the site of a bunch of respiratory disease outbreaks, including influenza and the coronaviruses that predate the one that causes Covid-19. In 2014 there were measles outbreaks at the International Dog Show in Slovenia, and at Disneyland.
But the Olympics has generally managed to avoid big infectious disease outbreaks, even when it happened during big disease scares. H1N1 influenza didnât hurt the 2010 Winter Games in Vancouver, neither SARS nor MERS spread through London in 2012, Zika didnât spread from Rio in 2016. Yet nevertheless, âWhat if people get sick at the Olympics?â is a top-three Olympic story subgenre. (The other two are âThis athlete is driven to succeed for personal reasonsâ and âOlympic athletes have sex with each other.â)
In early 2020, amid a pandemic then just beginning to swell into an exponential tsunami, the International Olympic Committee and the Tokyo organizers postponed the Games. An advisory group composed of experts from public health, travel medicine, economics, behavioral science, and even theme park design spent the gap year coming up with a plan. The person in charge was the one who was largely responsible for the successful public health measures at the London Games in 2012, a public health and mass-gathering expert named Brian McCloskey. âEssentially, the public health response to any event is the same. Itâs about how you determine what the risks will be and what you do about them,â McCloskey tells me. âThe difference here is the sheer scale, which we havenât seen before.â Before the organizers closed the Games to travelers in March, they expected 20 million people to come to Tokyo. That probably wouldnât have been great.
The Olympics are a strange beast. Even with the threat of deadly disease looming, all the stakeholders are highly incentivized to make sure the show goes on. The host countryâs tourism industries stand to get a windfall, as do the media organizations covering the Games. Olympic committees are famously full of jet-setters with cozy relationships to all the businesses involved. And unlike, say, professional sports, where missing a couple games might not matter much, Olympic athletes and coaches get their shot only once every four yearsâ"so they might put up with a little looseness in infection control measures.
Still, nobody wants anyone to get sick. That advisory group determined that the basic public health measures people relied on before the arrival of Covid vaccines would still work. In fact, things like hand-washing, mask-wearing, and avoiding crowds and poorly ventilated spaces were already working well in Japan. âWhat we did was to layer on top of that some of the learning from the UK, where not having a test-and-trace system was a weakness,â McCloskey says.
Youâll remember this from the pandemicâs early days, when the US and Europe mostly failed at it: Test everyone for Covid, trace the contacts of the people who are positive, and isolate them to keep one personâs infection from turning into a super-spreading event. Thatâd be the approach in Tokyo, along with reducing the number of people in the Olympic Village, improving the ventilation systems in those apartments, and adding âadditional filtrationâ and plexiglass shields (which probably donât really do anything, but OK) in the common areas. And âby and large there is no intermingling between the international community and the local Japanese population,â McCloskey says. âThey donât go out in the subway in Tokyo.â
The organizers thought about requiring vaccination but ultimately decided against it. âWe were fairly certain a vaccine would be available, but we were equally certain it would not be available equally around the world,â McCloskey says. âThatâs against the whole spirit of doing the Games. We also didnât want athletes competing for vaccines with health care workers and local populations.â
At a press conference just a few days before the Games were set to open, McCloskey described the systemâ"codified for the competitors into âplaybooksââ"as one of multiple layers of filtration. Athletes would get tested before they left their home countries and again every day before competition. Theyâd follow social distancing rules, the non-pharmaceutical interventions of 2020. And if someone pinged positive, theyâd get multiple kinds of tests, including a highly accurate nasopharyngeal PCR test, to see how high their viral load was and help determine the level of risk to the people they mightâve exposed. (More virus equals more bad.) Olympic staff would track their contacts, in part using forms the teams would fill out beforehand of who was close to whom. Vaccines, if athletes got them, would be a bonus layer.
As for the Olympic-bound folks already testing positive, McCloskey said that didnât constitute a failure in the system. Quite the oppositeâ"each one represented the cutting-off of a more infectious timeline that might have been. âWhat weâre seeing is what we expected to see, essentially,â McCloskey told reporters in Tokyo at a press conference on July 19, a week before the opening ceremony. âIf I thought all the tests we did would be negative, I wouldnât be bothering to do the tests.â
Hey, 91 positive cases out of roughly 15,000 competitors and tens of thousands of reporters and other Olympic workers ainât bad, right? For a few disease experts and athlete advocates, the answer is: That is, in fact, pretty badâ"because of what it says about the preparations, and what might happen next.
At least, thatâs what some scientists and experts have been saying. Hitoshi Oshitani, the virologist who devised Japanâs anti-Covid strategy, told The Times of London that he didnât think it was possible to have a safe Olympics. âThere are a number of countries that do not have many cases, and a number that donât have any variants,â Oshitani told The Times. âWe should not make the Olympics [an occasion] to spread the virus to these countries. There is not much risk to the US and UK, where people are vaccinated. But most countries in the world donât have the vaccine.â
McCloskey estimates about 85 percent of people coming to Tokyo will be vaccinated. But only about 22 percent of Japanese people are. Thatâs among the lowest rates of all wealthy countries. Combined with Japanâs relatively low case count, that means most of the population doesnât yet have antibodies to the virus. Theyâre what epidemiologists call ânaive.â Which means Japan might be, as the cliché goes, a victim of its own success. âClearly there is a high value being placed on holding these Olympics,â says Samuel Scarpino, managing director for pathogen surveillance at the Rockefeller Foundationâs Pandemic Prevention Institute. âBecause certainly itâs risky to bring people together in a congregate setting inside a country with essentially no vaccination and essentially no existing immunity in the population.â
Covid-19âs asymptomatic, airborne spread means that testing has to be extremely frequent, at least once a day, to catch cases before they infect others. The strict, successful disease control measures of the US National Football League and National Basketball Association for example, used all the typical hygiene and distancing measures, plus a hardcore test-trace-isolate regimen. The NFL performed daily reverse-transcription PCR tests and gave players and staff single-purpose electronic devices that registered close contacts; a cumulative 15 minutes or more counted as a higher risk. Over time, the NFL supplemented the electronics with intense in-person interviews to determine the nature of those contacts. (Masked? Indoors? While eating?) âWhat the NBA didâ"or womenâs basketball, which I advised last yearâ"was to design and pull off a bubble. Once youâre in it, youâre not out,â says Annie Sparrow, a population health science and policy professor at Mt. Sinai Medical School. âThereâs no way you can ever create a bubble at the Olympics. It just cannot be done at this scale.â
In early July, Sparrow and a bunch of other US researchers published a commentary in The New England Journal of Medicine expressing many of the same concerns Oshitani did. They went further, warning that the strategy McCloskeyâs group had come up with was based on outdated information about the dynamics of the virus.
That article, in turn, echoed criticisms leveled by the World Players Association, an international group that works with athletesâ unions around the world. The WPA has arguedâ"to little effect, having gotten no response from the IOCâ"that the rules consider contact on, say, the rugby pitch to be the same as contact in individual gymnastics or running track outdoors. WPA representatives criticized the shared-room situation and advice from the playbooks about opening windows once in a while for ventilation, something that might actually be impractical in Tokyoâs extreme summer heat. Also bad in the plan: allowing different kinds of masks and personal protective equipment, using phone apps for contact tracing instead of dedicated tech, and a lineup of other less-than-stellar interventions that the WPA reps said were just asking for trouble. âThereâs never going to be zero risk when it comes to Covid, but there certainly could have been more mitigation put in place,â says Matthew Graham, director of legal and player relations at the WPA. âWe, like the athletes we represent, hope this can be done safely, but no expense should have been spared for that.â
McCloskey, for his part, maintains that the measures his team has put in place will keep the Village, the Games, and Japan as safe as possible. âAs a general principle, I think if Iâm not being criticized, Iâm not doing my job properly,â he says.
If a few athletes get sick and are not able to competeâ"thatâs sad, but itâs not an economic or epidemiologic catastrophe. But the most expensive Summer Olympics ($15.4 billion!) in history with no visitors to the host city? Well, an Olympics failing to live up to the economic and development promises of its organizers wouldnât exactly be novel, though the actual studies on this are complicated.
The catastrophe, if it happens at all, will start out smallâ"inside a single human cell, infected by a virus. âWhenever you get many people together, thereâs the opportunity for large outbreaksâ"not just super-spreading events, but also multiple generations of transmission, and the infections can then be passed on when people return home,â says Sarah Cobey, an epidemiologist and evolutionary biologist at the University of Chicago. âAll such spread promotes not just new cases but also adaptation, including the movement of fitter variants to new populations.â
In other words, the problem isnât merely someone infecting someone else, or even lots of someone elses. These potential Olympic infections could be like microbiological invasive species, given the means to travel to new populations where they might be even more dangerous than they were at home. Covid-19 has been charged by super-spreader eventsâ"occasions where many people get infected at once. SARS-CoV-2, the virus that causes Covid-19, has evolved and adapted over the past 18 months, manifesting changes to its genetic code that make it easier for the virus to spread. Thatâs very good for a virus whose whole existential goal is to make more of itself; itâs very bad for humans, because it might make the virus more able to infect other people, either through force of numbers or being more virologically sneaky in infecting cells, or some other mechanism altogether.
A giant gathering with people from many different populations, almost certainly carrying different versions of the virus, is exactly the kind of place that makes super-spreader events and the exchange of new variants more possible. It mightâ"emphasis on mightâ"even make possible the development and spread of new, worse variants. âPersonally, if I were in charge of the Olympics in Japan, the risk of transmission getting established would be too high for me. Maybe their assumption is, if it does spill over, they can bring it under control again without risking an epidemic,â Scarpino says. âI may not agree with that, but I think where we diverge in the cost-benefit calculations of holding the Olympics versus the spread of Covid locally in Japan is when we get into the conversation of what this might mean for the evolution of the virus itself.â
This is the worst worst-case scenario. âThere are plenty of eco-evolutionary scenarios where this isnât a traditional super-spreader event, but a âsuper-evolutionary event,ââ Scarpino says, âwhere a critical mass of vaccinated individuals are selecting for variants that have increased transmissibility in vaccinated individuals.â All those people with differing immune statuses and different exposures to different strains of the virus could create a terrifying genetic parody of Olympismâs international cooperation: a free and open exchange of viral ideas on how to be more infectious, maybe even more deadly or more vaccine-evasive. And then itâd travel back to everyoneâs home country under the cover of asymptomatic spread.
There are two extremes on the scale of probability. The best outcome anyone can hope for at this point is that with the screening program in place, only a few people will get infected or ill. A few Olympic stories will end badly. Thatâs already happeningâ"athletes and the people who work with them have been denied a chance to compete in Tokyo because testing shows theyâre infected. And on the far side of the scale is a super-evolutionary event that allows the development of an even more potent form of the virus and then puts it on hundreds of jet planes headed to every corner of the planet. For everyone wondering what the most likely outcome is, itâs like the Olympics, except only in the most terrifying way possible: Itâs unpredictable.
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