Having said that, I do question whether there was a deliberate strategy to send the virus into care homes – were the Government working on the basis that you can’t kill the same people twice, so if a second wave comes then the death rate will be lower by design?
Interesting thought, but I'm not sure the logic works. If the care homes (concentrations of people most likely to die) were entirely sealed up (staff living on site, no visits at all, not even compassionate ones) then the overall death rate would be lower in the first, second and any subsequent waves.
I think the answer is far simpler. The images from elsewhere in Europe (not shown on UK media) of people being triaged and effectively left to die caused such alarm that the decision making became focused on "protecting the NHS". The media hype about lack of ventilators and ICU beds then led to a clear-out of hospital beds to prepare for armageddon.
The result - and I'm sure it was entirely unintended - was to send infected people out and into the very environments where the maximum risk actually existed.
Hindsight is great. We are talking about deaths in care homes now primarily because they make up a very significant proportion of the total number of deaths. In another scenario - say where the older people were
not sent from the hospitals to care homes - then if the NHS had been overwhelmed and the total death toll was ~100,000 (but very few in care homes) the inevitable public inquiry would be examining why the "bed blockers" weren't moved out to maximise NHS capacity to treat the younger people who 'needlessly died'.
An event like Covid-19 is always judged through a prism manufactured after the event.
Crass, cruel and impractical, I know - and I’m not actively suggesting we should do it - but if we were to continue a total lock down for those known to be most at risk, eg the elderly & those with certain pre-existing conditions, including obesity, then the rest of the population could pretty much get on with life without overwhelming the NHS. There would still be deaths, but not excessively so.
This would only work in a society where each and every death doesn't result in the seeking of someone or something to blame. Unfortunately we've lost touch with the notion that death is a thing that happens to us all, that the best we can do is to postpone it.
It would be a very brave politician that enacted your proposal against that background.
