Advertisement

The city where three-quarters of residents caught COVID

People walk along Manaus city center, Amazonas state, Brazil, on September 25, 2020. - The Brazilian city of Manaus, which was devastated by the coronavirus pandemic, may have suffered so many infections that its population now benefits from "herd immunity," according to a preliminary study. Published on the website medRxiv, the study analyzed infection data with mathematical modeling to estimate that 66 percent of the population had antibodies to the new coronavirus in Manaus, where the pandemic's passage was as fast as it was brutal. (Photo by MICHAEL DANTAS / AFP) (Photo by MICHAEL DANTAS/AFP via Getty Images)
Residents walk through the Brazilian city of Manaus, which was devastated by the coronavirus pandemic. (AFP via Getty Images)
coronavirus latest news
coronavirus latest news

A Brazilian city saw more than three-quarters of its residents contract coronavirus between March and October, a report has shown.

Manaus, a city with a population of two million, never introduced a full lockdown during the pandemic.

While non-essential businesses were closed, many people ignored social distancing guidelines.

Scientists from Imperial College London, University of Sao Paulo and Oxford University warned that the city is an example of the extent that COVID-19 can spread “without effective mitigation”.

Watch: Brazil’s Bolsonaro says he won’t take vaccine

In April and May, so many Manaus residents were dying that its hospitals collapsed and mass graves had to be dug.

The city is the largest in the Amazon region – the worst hit area of Brazil, which has itself been one of the worst hit countries in the world.

Read: The European country that managed to contain the second wave of COVID

The nation has seen around 6.5 million reported cases and more than 175,000 deaths.

The team of researchers behind the report found that 76% of Manaus’ population had been infected with COVID-19 between March and October.

Aerial view of the burial site reserved for victims of the COVID pandemic at the Nossa Senhora Aparecida cemetery in Manaus, in the Amazon forest in Brazil on November 21, 2020. - Brazil has been one of the countries hit hardest by the pandemic, with more than 166,000 people killed, the second-highest number in the world, following the United States and is bracing for a possible second wave of mass infections as it races to test and then distribute its first 120,000 doses of Coronavac, a potential COVID-19 vaccine developed by Chinese lab Sinovac Biotech. (Photo by MICHAEL DANTAS / AFP) (Photo by MICHAEL DANTAS/AFP via Getty Images)
Aerial view of the burial site reserved for victims of the COVID pandemic at the Nossa Senhora Aparecida cemetery in Manaus. (AFP via Getty Images)

In contrast, they found that only 29% became infected in Sao Paulo – another city that has been hit hard by the pandemic but did introduce full lockdown measures.

The report said the large transmission rate in Manaus may also be explained by socioeconomic conditions, household crowding and limited access to clean water.

Reliance on high transmission risk boat travel, in which over-crowding results in accelerated contagion – similar to that seen on cruise ships – also likely contributed, the scientists added.

When cases suddenly plummeted in June after Manaus’ huge infection and death rates during the first wave, some scientists theorised that the city had reached a form of herd immunity.

Many thought that Manaus may vindicate the argument for countries to adopt a herd immunity approach to the pandemic.

AMAZONAS, BRAZIL - OCTOBER 03: A view of Taruman Park Cemetery used to bury coronavirus (Covid-19) victims is seen as death toll rises due to the pandemic in Manaus, Amazonas, Brazil on October 03, 2020. (Photo by Junio Matos/Anadolu Agency via Getty Images)
Taruman Park Cemetery, which was used to bury coronavirus victims in Manaus. (Anadolu Agency via Getty Images)

However, this was quickly thrown into doubt when a resurgence in cases swept through the city in September.

Professor Nuno Faria, from Imperial College London and the University of Oxford, said: “The large burden of illness and death caused by COVID-19 in Manaus emphasises the importance of face coverings, social distancing and hand washing to stop the spread of infection throughout Brazil – measures that will be reinforced by vaccination to immunise individuals at risk and, ultimately, to protect whole populations.”

Read: Matt Hancock declaring vaccine V-Day is 'premature and dangerous', expert warns

Professor Ester Sabino, immunologist at the University of Sao Paulo, added: “Infection rates are currently high in Latin America and we find particularly high infection rates in Manaus, the largest urban metropolis in the Amazon region.

“Manaus is a warning for other cities, for example Sao Paulo could more than double the number of deaths if it reached a similar level of infection.”

Watch: Brazil’s Santas are out of work