Dublin Drummer Wolf
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Our holiday to Tenerife at the end of April has been cancelled.
I'm gutted but I get it.
I'm gutted but I get it.
It all doesn’t add up. Someone is withholding info somewhere, or releasing incorrect info.
The death rate was/is apparently minor, and is only affecting the vulnerable. So in which case, it isn’t much to worry about as a population. Yes there will be some unavoidable loss of life, but generally speaking we will be ok.
They are also saying China are over the worst of it after a couple of months with a minimal isolation period.
However I have friends who are Dr’s saying ITU is oversubscribed already, including people in the 30-50 age range, and that they are understaffed and running out of equipment. Now this doesn’t correlate with the “most will be ok” narrative. It also doesn’t correlate with the herd immunity method, and certainly doesn’t suggest 2 weeks isolation will be fine. Particularly when they are saying 12 weeks.
It all doesn’t make sense, and the science isn’t adding up. And I can’t find the science to make my own educated opinion. It’s all guess work.
Our holiday to Tenerife at the end of April has been cancelled.
I'm gutted but I get it.
"Flatten the curve" sounds really simplistic, but it does kind of sum everything up - a death rate around 1% isn't something to sniff at in a population of 65 million. It does all feel rather strange right now. It reminds me of the Millennium Bug in a lot of ways, because the measures required to mitigate the problem are so extreme, but if they work they'll feel like massive overkill.
The government is scrambling to piece together a design for a British-made medical ventilator “from scratch” to help treat severe coronavirus cases in the UK, even as businesses warned that it was unrealistic to ask companies to build an entirely new model.
In a telephone conference with the heads of big engineering companies on Monday evening, Boris Johnson, the prime minister, called for more than 20,000 ventilators to be made within two weeks, according to two executives with knowledge of the discussion.
However, bosses have warned that they need a licensed design before they can start the manufacturing process. “We can’t make one up,” one executive said. “We can produce a licensed design, but not a wholly new one,” he said. “We have more than enough capacity to help but we need a design that is certified.”
Our holiday to Tenerife at the end of April has been cancelled.
I'm gutted but I get it.
For eight out of ten people the prognosis is excellent. Yes a few shitty days but we'll get over it. People need to stop being selfish, seeking attention and concentrate on those who are truly at risk and the incredible people on the front line who are there for them. Moaning about theatres, cinemas and pubs closing is low form if you ask me.
The information and rates can be confusing, as can some of the terminology. For example, "mild" symptoms. Every health agency has its own version of what this means - and the WHO, confusingly, was using "mild" early on to include cases which require medical intervention in hospitals. Furthermore, the kinds of scaling we're looking at with only a "minor" mortality rate are unintuitive, yet still lead to inevitably terrible conclusions.
You really don't need a large increase in new admissions requiring intensive care to cause huge knock-on effects in the system in ways that can make "milder" symptoms more dangerous. Healthcare systems just don't have a lot of slack in them - they're generally planned to be able to handle the peak of the winter flu season at worst, and that's not even accounting for how a decade of cuts has meant that the summer NHS in 2019 looked like a bad winter in 2010. Doctors and nurses become sick during a pandemic too, meaning you end up inevitably short-staffed. And with worldwide demands for specific materials, it breaks up supply chains for items that would normally be available on tap.
"Flatten the curve" sounds really simplistic, but it does kind of sum everything up - a death rate around 1% isn't something to sniff at in a population of 65 million. It does all feel rather strange right now. It reminds me of the Millennium Bug in a lot of ways, because the measures required to mitigate the problem are so extreme, but if they work they'll feel like massive overkill.
Apparently the fat prat was cracking (rubbish) jokes as well during the call. Christ.
I'd doubt the veracity of that conversation. If true the 'bosses' (whoever they are) don't know their arses from their elbows. It could be done easily in two weeks.
Still nothing on the self-employed though, so I'm still fucked.
Sunak is a very good speaker indeed.
£330bn in loans available to businesses and more later if required.