House-arrest

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Re: House-arrest

Post by Dunners »

Not yet. There's a few online accounts from people, but it will be a few weeks before most people have any experience or hear of people they know having it.
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Re: House-arrest

Post by Dohnut »

Adz wrote: Mon Mar 16, 2020 9:41 am
Redline wrote: Mon Mar 16, 2020 4:34 am
NuneatonO's wrote: Sun Mar 15, 2020 3:10 pm
If, as predicted, this outbreak reaches it's peak in a few weeks time, then perhaps people will finally wake up and realise how inept, lying tory governments have been decimating the NHS since 2010?

Not to mention the amount of essential, front-line staff that are now missing; many having returned to their homelands.

Thanks tory voters; in particular, the Brexit-loving ones. I hope that you are all proud of yourselves.
In Australia right now. 24/7 news on the virus.

It’s been explained that the measures being introduced are to avoid a peak in infections, smoothing the graph so to speak. Won’t necessarily reduce infection numbers but avoids the spike. A spike that the over 70s make worse because they are more likely to have chronic conditions that eat up more resources. Just look at the death rate by age.

Why? Because the health service in Aus, like every other country, cannot cope with the spike leading to decisions about who to treat and who to ignore. Also in Perth they are running short of testing kits.

So it’s got f*** all to do with the NHS funding and everything to do with the worlds health systems not being able to cope with the spike if everybody gets it at once. This is an exceptional situation.

It’s also been explained that in some areas staff rotation is being used to minimise the risk of all staff getting it at once.

Frankly people who try to make a party-political issue out of this are idiots who just don’t understand what the F*** is really going on and why measures are being taken.

Update. The NZ Prime minister has been displaying the spike graph too, explaining the measures. Not just GB, but the rest of the world.
Sadly flattening the curve is a load of bollocks. Note the lack of numbers in the charts. It would take years if you applied the numbers to the bell curve, anyone ready for that?
Flattening the curve, as explained by experts in Aus and reiterated by the New Zealand PM to me seems extremely sensible. It’s not about the numbers overall but the numbers the health systems are able to cope with at any one time. It avoids the choice that has happened in Italy at one point where medics had to choose who to treat because they just can’t treat everybody. I’d sooner take their opinions than yours with all due respect.

As for taking years? Who knows. A vaccine will happen along at some time, in the interim it’s about management and management is flattening the curve.

The numbers! What we know is that the majority of recorded cases people sometimes have no real effects, some don’t even know they have it apparently. It’s about managing those cases where people suffer adverse reactions and as we have seen it’s hitting those with chronic conditions the hardest. Hence the oldies like me being asked to isolate, not for our sakes but to reduce the risk burden on the health system.

It’s very clear Governments are learning on the job. That is no criticism of them, this is a massive learning curve which is why things change by the day. It’s really not a time to play party-politics, points scoring and so on. Once all this is over, which it will be at some point, we can all argue the toss, with the benefit of hindsight.
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Re: House-arrest

Post by BoniO »

Redline wrote: Mon Mar 16, 2020 12:06 pm
Adz wrote: Mon Mar 16, 2020 9:41 am
Redline wrote: Mon Mar 16, 2020 4:34 am

In Australia right now. 24/7 news on the virus.

It’s been explained that the measures being introduced are to avoid a peak in infections, smoothing the graph so to speak. Won’t necessarily reduce infection numbers but avoids the spike. A spike that the over 70s make worse because they are more likely to have chronic conditions that eat up more resources. Just look at the death rate by age.

Why? Because the health service in Aus, like every other country, cannot cope with the spike leading to decisions about who to treat and who to ignore. Also in Perth they are running short of testing kits.

So it’s got f*** all to do with the NHS funding and everything to do with the worlds health systems not being able to cope with the spike if everybody gets it at once. This is an exceptional situation.

It’s also been explained that in some areas staff rotation is being used to minimise the risk of all staff getting it at once.

Frankly people who try to make a party-political issue out of this are idiots who just don’t understand what the F*** is really going on and why measures are being taken.

Update. The NZ Prime minister has been displaying the spike graph too, explaining the measures. Not just GB, but the rest of the world.
Sadly flattening the curve is a load of bollocks. Note the lack of numbers in the charts. It would take years if you applied the numbers to the bell curve, anyone ready for that?
Flattening the curve, as explained by experts in Aus and reiterated by the New Zealand PM to me seems extremely sensible. It’s not about the numbers overall but the numbers the health systems are able to cope with at any one time. It avoids the choice that has happened in Italy at one point where medics had to choose who to treat because they just can’t treat everybody. I’d sooner take their opinions than yours with all due respect.

As for taking years? Who knows. A vaccine will happen along at some time, in the interim it’s about management and management is flattening the curve.

The numbers! What we know is that the majority of recorded cases people sometimes have no real effects, some don’t even know they have it apparently. It’s about managing those cases where people suffer adverse reactions and as we have seen it’s hitting those with chronic conditions the hardest. Hence the oldies like me being asked to isolate, not for our sakes but to reduce the risk burden on the health system.

It’s very clear Governments are learning on the job. That is no criticism of them, this is a massive learning curve which is why things change by the day. It’s really not a time to play party-politics, points scoring and so on. Once all this is over, which it will be at some point, we can all argue the toss, with the benefit of hindsight.
Flattening the curve makes some sense but not at the expense of not taking all possibly draconian measures to contain it first. The government has no excuse from not learning from other Countries who have been much more successful at containing the outbreak. If they'd followed the leads/actions of some other Countries then we probably would be in a much better place. That is very much a criticism and a valid one. When the CSO states that we are looking to a herd immunity solution - at the very likely cost of hundreds of thousands of lives - only for the Health Minister to say we aren't doing that at all - only confuses where absolute clarity in word and action is needed.
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Re: House-arrest

Post by Disoriented »

BoniO wrote: Mon Mar 16, 2020 1:03 pm
Redline wrote: Mon Mar 16, 2020 12:06 pm
Adz wrote: Mon Mar 16, 2020 9:41 am

Sadly flattening the curve is a load of bollocks. Note the lack of numbers in the charts. It would take years if you applied the numbers to the bell curve, anyone ready for that?
Flattening the curve, as explained by experts in Aus and reiterated by the New Zealand PM to me seems extremely sensible. It’s not about the numbers overall but the numbers the health systems are able to cope with at any one time. It avoids the choice that has happened in Italy at one point where medics had to choose who to treat because they just can’t treat everybody. I’d sooner take their opinions than yours with all due respect.

As for taking years? Who knows. A vaccine will happen along at some time, in the interim it’s about management and management is flattening the curve.

The numbers! What we know is that the majority of recorded cases people sometimes have no real effects, some don’t even know they have it apparently. It’s about managing those cases where people suffer adverse reactions and as we have seen it’s hitting those with chronic conditions the hardest. Hence the oldies like me being asked to isolate, not for our sakes but to reduce the risk burden on the health system.

It’s very clear Governments are learning on the job. That is no criticism of them, this is a massive learning curve which is why things change by the day. It’s really not a time to play party-politics, points scoring and so on. Once all this is over, which it will be at some point, we can all argue the toss, with the benefit of hindsight.
Flattening the curve makes some sense but not at the expense of not taking all possibly draconian measures to contain it first. The government has no excuse from not learning from other Countries who have been much more successful at containing the outbreak. If they'd followed the leads/actions of some other Countries then we probably would be in a much better place. That is very much a criticism and a valid one. When the CSO states that we are looking to a herd immunity solution - at the very likely cost of hundreds of thousands of lives - only for the Health Minister to say we aren't doing that at all - only confuses where absolute clarity in word and action is needed.
Quite right on all counts.
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Re: House-arrest

Post by Lucky7 »

BoniO wrote: Mon Mar 16, 2020 1:03 pm
Redline wrote: Mon Mar 16, 2020 12:06 pm
Adz wrote: Mon Mar 16, 2020 9:41 am

Sadly flattening the curve is a load of bollocks. Note the lack of numbers in the charts. It would take years if you applied the numbers to the bell curve, anyone ready for that?
Flattening the curve, as explained by experts in Aus and reiterated by the New Zealand PM to me seems extremely sensible. It’s not about the numbers overall but the numbers the health systems are able to cope with at any one time. It avoids the choice that has happened in Italy at one point where medics had to choose who to treat because they just can’t treat everybody. I’d sooner take their opinions than yours with all due respect.

As for taking years? Who knows. A vaccine will happen along at some time, in the interim it’s about management and management is flattening the curve.

The numbers! What we know is that the majority of recorded cases people sometimes have no real effects, some don’t even know they have it apparently. It’s about managing those cases where people suffer adverse reactions and as we have seen it’s hitting those with chronic conditions the hardest. Hence the oldies like me being asked to isolate, not for our sakes but to reduce the risk burden on the health system.

It’s very clear Governments are learning on the job. That is no criticism of them, this is a massive learning curve which is why things change by the day. It’s really not a time to play party-politics, points scoring and so on. Once all this is over, which it will be at some point, we can all argue the toss, with the benefit of hindsight.
Flattening the curve makes some sense but not at the expense of not taking all possibly draconian measures to contain it first. The government has no excuse from not learning from other Countries who have been much more successful at containing the outbreak. If they'd followed the leads/actions of some other Countries then we probably would be in a much better place. That is very much a criticism and a valid one. When the CSO states that we are looking to a herd immunity solution - at the very likely cost of hundreds of thousands of lives - only for the Health Minister to say we aren't doing that at all - only confuses where absolute clarity in word and action is needed.
Understand all that but the experts are saying once China come out of containment etc a second wave of Covid 19 will happen big time
End of the day even the so called experts are clueless on how this is going to pan out
Hold on to your hats 🎩!!!!!
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Re: House-arrest

Post by Dohnut »

Disoriented wrote: Mon Mar 16, 2020 3:45 pm
BoniO wrote: Mon Mar 16, 2020 1:03 pm
Redline wrote: Mon Mar 16, 2020 12:06 pm

Flattening the curve, as explained by experts in Aus and reiterated by the New Zealand PM to me seems extremely sensible. It’s not about the numbers overall but the numbers the health systems are able to cope with at any one time. It avoids the choice that has happened in Italy at one point where medics had to choose who to treat because they just can’t treat everybody. I’d sooner take their opinions than yours with all due respect.

As for taking years? Who knows. A vaccine will happen along at some time, in the interim it’s about management and management is flattening the curve.

The numbers! What we know is that the majority of recorded cases people sometimes have no real effects, some don’t even know they have it apparently. It’s about managing those cases where people suffer adverse reactions and as we have seen it’s hitting those with chronic conditions the hardest. Hence the oldies like me being asked to isolate, not for our sakes but to reduce the risk burden on the health system.

It’s very clear Governments are learning on the job. That is no criticism of them, this is a massive learning curve which is why things change by the day. It’s really not a time to play party-politics, points scoring and so on. Once all this is over, which it will be at some point, we can all argue the toss, with the benefit of hindsight.
Flattening the curve makes some sense but not at the expense of not taking all possibly draconian measures to contain it first. The government has no excuse from not learning from other Countries who have been much more successful at containing the outbreak. If they'd followed the leads/actions of some other Countries then we probably would be in a much better place. That is very much a criticism and a valid one. When the CSO states that we are looking to a herd immunity solution - at the very likely cost of hundreds of thousands of lives - only for the Health Minister to say we aren't doing that at all - only confuses where absolute clarity in word and action is needed.
Quite right on all counts.
Interestingly there are many people criticising the EU too over stuff too. France and Spain for example are struggling, France in particular have had a change in strategy. Italy is in crisis.

The whole world is in a state of uncertainty. Every day we see new measures. Canada now baning non-essential inbound flights as is Europe.

Tougher measures now in Australia following an increase in numbers and projections of 150,000 deaths in what is a small population. Talks are of survival of the fittest with the elderly at the back of the queue as the Health system struggles to cope despite new money being pumped in.

Things are changing by the day, Governments doing stuff by the day. Using this to beat up Governments is simply playing party-politics. The world is heading for recession, people dieing, thousands losing jobs, some industries may never recover. Yet some choose to blame Boris! Unbelievable.

I listen to Aussie politians talk, they openly talk about how difficult decisions and actions are, not certain whether things like closing schools doing more harm than good. Wrong to criticise them too right now. Every leader is doing the best they can in impossible conditions.
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Re: House-arrest

Post by Mikero »

How can pointing out that the NHS would be having a much easier time of it if the 48,000 nurses that they are short of were in post be political point scoring, it is fact. The flutting of pidgeons coming home to roost is giving some people amnesia.

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Re: House-arrest

Post by E10EU »

point nine one eight wrote: Mon Mar 16, 2020 3:33 am
Lucky7 wrote: Sun Mar 15, 2020 8:12 pm
Thor wrote: Sun Mar 15, 2020 8:03 pm

China has not told the truth since this started so I wouldn’t beleive a word their government tells us.
And yet you believe everything Johnson and his cronies are doing are for the good of people

Get real ffs
Boris is a Hero sent by him upstairs to save the country from Jeremy Corblimy
Is there as virus that causes ignorance and stupidity?
Seems that Johnson has well and truly fecked this country.

And all because he fancied himself as Churchill MK.II
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Re: House-arrest

Post by Dohnut »

Mikero wrote: Tue Mar 17, 2020 12:31 am How can pointing out that the NHS would be having a much easier time of it if the 48,000 nurses that they are short of were in post be political point scoring, it is fact. The flutting of pidgeons coming home to roost is giving some people amnesia.

Mikero
Like I said before. A discussion about how the NHS has been managed/mismanaged for decades is a separate and valid debate. And one that extends way beyond the last decade. And it’s not just a debate about funding but management and planning in general. Very easy to extend the debate to the general population whose habits are increasing pressures on services. A big topic.

The current situation is unique and health services around the globe are struggling. I will say it again, health services around the globe are struggling. Therefore if anybody wants to criticise NHS funding, by the same token that criticism applies to most countries around the globe who are also struggling to cope. The NHS are far from unique in managing this problem.

This is not a difficult concept. The current crisis has not been planned for anywhere in the world. Anywhere in the world.
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Re: House-arrest

Post by Ronnie Hotdogs »

Redline is a very strange, pro Tory, new account, isn’t he?

Wonder who he used to be?
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Re: House-arrest

Post by point nine one eight »

E10EU wrote: Tue Mar 17, 2020 1:36 am
point nine one eight wrote: Mon Mar 16, 2020 3:33 am
Lucky7 wrote: Sun Mar 15, 2020 8:12 pm

And yet you believe everything Johnson and his cronies are doing are for the good of people

Get real ffs
Boris is a Hero sent by him upstairs to save the country from Jeremy Corblimy
Is there as virus that causes ignorance and stupidity?
Seems that Johnson has well and truly fecked this country.

And all because he fancied himself as Churchill MK.II
Yes there is and you've got it, you're a typical socialist, knock everything you disagree with then resort to attacking the poster, He is Prime Minister and achieved something in life, you are a nothing and will remain so, you poor jealous thing, Go back to following Jeremy the guy who looks like a pissed geography teacher
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Re: House-arrest

Post by Dohnut »

RedO wrote: Tue Mar 17, 2020 7:11 am Redline is a very strange, pro Tory, new account, isn’t he?

Wonder who he used to be?
Where am I pro Tory?

The issues being complained about are not down to politicians and mirror what I am seeing in Aus.

For example, inexperienced doctors and nurses, even those not yet qualified, are expected to be called upon to help out existing numbers who won’t cope should the spike happen. Not enough beds in the Internsive care units expected and plans being drawn up to prioritise limited facilities. The elderly, those with terminal conditions etc may not get treated at all. Ventilation equipment will be insufficient to cope with the expected increase. Routine surgery likely to be deferred. Survival of the fittest is the term being used.

Big debates on whether schools should close, currently the thinking is students are better off at school, whilst lots of parents are taking their kids out of school. Conflicting views on what should be done.

Kids football too has been stopped, the latest thing to happen just today. Strange times.

So when I here criticism of UK politicians then the same could be said for the Aussie ones, and the French, Germans, Italians, Spanish and so on, who to me anyway, seem to be doing all they can given the uncertainty of the situation that changes by the day.

I’m in almost self imposed isolation watching TV all day, hoping my Qantas flight home don’t get cancelled.

There will be plenty of time to argue the toss once this situation recovers. Right now it’s about pulling together.
Last edited by Dohnut on Tue Mar 17, 2020 9:33 am, edited 1 time in total.
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Re: House-arrest

Post by BoniO »

point nine one eight wrote: Tue Mar 17, 2020 9:01 am
E10EU wrote: Tue Mar 17, 2020 1:36 am
point nine one eight wrote: Mon Mar 16, 2020 3:33 am

Boris is a Hero sent by him upstairs to save the country from Jeremy Corblimy
Is there as virus that causes ignorance and stupidity?
Seems that Johnson has well and truly fecked this country.

And all because he fancied himself as Churchill MK.II
Yes there is and you've got it, you're a typical socialist, knock everything you disagree with then resort to attacking the poster, He is Prime Minister and achieved something in life, you are a nothing and will remain so, you poor jealous thing, Go back to following Jeremy the guy who looks like a p*ssed geography teacher
Got to be a spoof character surely. Nobody could possibly be this ignorant, and proud of it too!
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Re: House-arrest

Post by BoniO »

Redline wrote: Tue Mar 17, 2020 9:32 am
RedO wrote: Tue Mar 17, 2020 7:11 am Redline is a very strange, pro Tory, new account, isn’t he?

Wonder who he used to be?
Where am I pro Tory?

The issues being complained about are not down to politicians and mirror what I am seeing in Aus.

For example, inexperienced doctors and nurses, even those not yet qualified, are expected to be called upon to help out existing numbers who won’t cope should the spike happen. Not enough beds in the Internsive care units expected and plans being drawn up to prioritise limited facilities. The elderly, those with terminal conditions etc may not get treated at all. Ventilation equipment will be insufficient to cope with the expected increase. Routine surgery likely to be deferred. Survival of the fittest is the term being used.

Big debates on whether schools should close, currently the thinking is students are better off at school, whilst lots of parents are taking their kids out of school. Conflicting views on what should be done.

Kids football too has been stopped, the latest thing to happen just today. Strange times.

So when I here criticism of UK politicians then the same could be said for the Aussie ones, and the French, Germans, Italians, Spanish and so on, who to me anyway, seem to be doing all they can given the uncertainty of the situation that changes by the day.

I’m in almost self imposed isolation watching TV all day, hoping my Qantas flight home don’t get cancelled.

There will be plenty of time to argue the toss once this situation recovers. Right now it’s about pulling together.
Sorry, but that's bollocks. Of course this is a Global issue, of course every government is struggling, of course all health services are under pressure, you really don't need to keep repeating this ad nauseum. However, some governments are doing better than others. Some are taking radical steps before the situation gets completely out of control. Some, like our government I would suggest, are not learning from "best practices" from around the globe. That's unforgivable given that the price for their failure to adopt such best practices will almost inevitably lead to many thousands of deaths that could have been avoided.
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Re: House-arrest

Post by Dohnut »

BoniO wrote: Tue Mar 17, 2020 9:40 am
Redline wrote: Tue Mar 17, 2020 9:32 am
RedO wrote: Tue Mar 17, 2020 7:11 am Redline is a very strange, pro Tory, new account, isn’t he?

Wonder who he used to be?
Where am I pro Tory?

The issues being complained about are not down to politicians and mirror what I am seeing in Aus.

For example, inexperienced doctors and nurses, even those not yet qualified, are expected to be called upon to help out existing numbers who won’t cope should the spike happen. Not enough beds in the Internsive care units expected and plans being drawn up to prioritise limited facilities. The elderly, those with terminal conditions etc may not get treated at all. Ventilation equipment will be insufficient to cope with the expected increase. Routine surgery likely to be deferred. Survival of the fittest is the term being used.

Big debates on whether schools should close, currently the thinking is students are better off at school, whilst lots of parents are taking their kids out of school. Conflicting views on what should be done.

Kids football too has been stopped, the latest thing to happen just today. Strange times.

So when I here criticism of UK politicians then the same could be said for the Aussie ones, and the French, Germans, Italians, Spanish and so on, who to me anyway, seem to be doing all they can given the uncertainty of the situation that changes by the day.

I’m in almost self imposed isolation watching TV all day, hoping my Qantas flight home don’t get cancelled.

There will be plenty of time to argue the toss once this situation recovers. Right now it’s about pulling together.
Sorry, but that's bollocks. Of course this is a Global issue, of course every government is struggling, of course all health services are under pressure, you really don't need to keep repeating this ad nauseum. However, some governments are doing better than others. Some are taking radical steps before the situation gets completely out of control. Some, like our government I would suggest, are not learning from "best practices" from around the globe. That's unforgivable given that the price for their failure to adopt such best practices will almost inevitably lead to many thousands of deaths that could have been avoided.
And what is best practice. What I can tell you for sure that here in Aus there are varying views on exactly what best practice is. Maybe you should drop them an email and offer advice. One example, Some countries are suggesting no groups of more than 5 to 10 people. In Aus the number is 500. They say it may change. Already covered the schools issue. So what is right? Some borders remain open, others closed.

Look at testing numbers, the UK is up there on the list of countries carrying out tests on people. As of yesterday reported cases inthe UK compare favourably against many others. As do the increase rates. Current stats don’t suggest we are off the pace.

Nobody really knows what best practice is, things change by the day. USA ban flights for Europe but exclude The UK and Ireland from the ban. Days later we are included. What don’t people get about this problem? It changes by the day, people learn more each day, Governments adjust each day. So please don’t give me all this bolox about best practice. The world is still trying to work it all out. Today’s best practice may be different tomorrow.
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Re: House-arrest

Post by BoniO »

Redline wrote: Tue Mar 17, 2020 9:58 am
BoniO wrote: Tue Mar 17, 2020 9:40 am
Redline wrote: Tue Mar 17, 2020 9:32 am

Where am I pro Tory?

The issues being complained about are not down to politicians and mirror what I am seeing in Aus.

For example, inexperienced doctors and nurses, even those not yet qualified, are expected to be called upon to help out existing numbers who won’t cope should the spike happen. Not enough beds in the Internsive care units expected and plans being drawn up to prioritise limited facilities. The elderly, those with terminal conditions etc may not get treated at all. Ventilation equipment will be insufficient to cope with the expected increase. Routine surgery likely to be deferred. Survival of the fittest is the term being used.

Big debates on whether schools should close, currently the thinking is students are better off at school, whilst lots of parents are taking their kids out of school. Conflicting views on what should be done.

Kids football too has been stopped, the latest thing to happen just today. Strange times.

So when I here criticism of UK politicians then the same could be said for the Aussie ones, and the French, Germans, Italians, Spanish and so on, who to me anyway, seem to be doing all they can given the uncertainty of the situation that changes by the day.

I’m in almost self imposed isolation watching TV all day, hoping my Qantas flight home don’t get cancelled.

There will be plenty of time to argue the toss once this situation recovers. Right now it’s about pulling together.
Sorry, but that's bollocks. Of course this is a Global issue, of course every government is struggling, of course all health services are under pressure, you really don't need to keep repeating this ad nauseum. However, some governments are doing better than others. Some are taking radical steps before the situation gets completely out of control. Some, like our government I would suggest, are not learning from "best practices" from around the globe. That's unforgivable given that the price for their failure to adopt such best practices will almost inevitably lead to many thousands of deaths that could have been avoided.
And what is best practice. What I can tell you for sure that here in Aus there are varying views on exactly what best practice is. Maybe you should drop them an email and offer advice. One example, Some countries are suggesting no groups of more than 5 to 10 people. In Aus the number is 500. They say it may change. Already covered the schools issue. So what is right? Some borders remain open, others closed.

Look at testing numbers, the UK is up there on the list of countries carrying out tests on people. As of yesterday reported cases inthe UK compare favourably against many others. As do the increase rates. Current stats don’t suggest we are off the pace.

Nobody really knows what best practice is, things change by the day. USA ban flights for Europe but exclude The UK and Ireland from the ban. Days later we are included. What don’t people get about this problem? It changes by the day, people learn more each day, Governments adjust each day. So please don’t give me all this bolox about best practice. The world is still trying to work it all out. Today’s best practice may be different tomorrow.
I guess we could keep this argument going but this is my last reply to you. There is some truth in what you say, governments are still learning and doctors are still learning about the virus itself. Secondly, I also agree that adjustments are probably needed each day. However, I'd suggest that best practices are visible out there. Some Countries have managed to radically slow this virus down. How have they done that? Don't you think we should be asking them and following their lead? As for testing in the UK, we aren't even testing our front-line NHS staff - even though they are crying out for it - if we're talking best practices then that sure as hell isn't. Other Countries are testing those who think they have the virus whereas the UK CSO yesterday just said "if you think you have it stay at home and all your family stay at home too" - so exactly how are we "up there". It's absolutely right to criticise the government now - not later as you suggest - because it just might make a difference to how they react to this crisis. Failing to do the right thing now may cost tens of thousands of lives. End.
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Re: House-arrest

Post by Disoriented »

BoniO wrote: Tue Mar 17, 2020 10:11 am
Redline wrote: Tue Mar 17, 2020 9:58 am
BoniO wrote: Tue Mar 17, 2020 9:40 am

Sorry, but that's bollocks. Of course this is a Global issue, of course every government is struggling, of course all health services are under pressure, you really don't need to keep repeating this ad nauseum. However, some governments are doing better than others. Some are taking radical steps before the situation gets completely out of control. Some, like our government I would suggest, are not learning from "best practices" from around the globe. That's unforgivable given that the price for their failure to adopt such best practices will almost inevitably lead to many thousands of deaths that could have been avoided.
And what is best practice. What I can tell you for sure that here in Aus there are varying views on exactly what best practice is. Maybe you should drop them an email and offer advice. One example, Some countries are suggesting no groups of more than 5 to 10 people. In Aus the number is 500. They say it may change. Already covered the schools issue. So what is right? Some borders remain open, others closed.

Look at testing numbers, the UK is up there on the list of countries carrying out tests on people. As of yesterday reported cases inthe UK compare favourably against many others. As do the increase rates. Current stats don’t suggest we are off the pace.

Nobody really knows what best practice is, things change by the day. USA ban flights for Europe but exclude The UK and Ireland from the ban. Days later we are included. What don’t people get about this problem? It changes by the day, people learn more each day, Governments adjust each day. So please don’t give me all this bolox about best practice. The world is still trying to work it all out. Today’s best practice may be different tomorrow.
I guess we could keep this argument going but this is my last reply to you. There is some truth in what you say, governments are still learning and doctors are still learning about the virus itself. Secondly, I also agree that adjustments are probably needed each day. However, I'd suggest that best practices are visible out there. Some Countries have managed to radically slow this virus down. How have they done that? Don't you think we should be asking them and following their lead? As for testing in the UK, we aren't even testing our front-line NHS staff - even though they are crying out for it - if we're talking best practices then that sure as hell isn't. Other Countries are testing those who think they have the virus whereas the UK CSO yesterday just said "if you think you have it stay at home and all your family stay at home too" - so exactly how are we "up there". It's absolutely right to criticise the government now - not later as you suggest - because it just might make a difference to how they react to this crisis. Failing to do the right thing now may cost tens of thousands of lives. End.
Singapore is a case as you suggest.
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Re: House-arrest

Post by Dohnut »

There is no probable about changes every day. There are changes every day. If you wonder about advice given to people, the UK is no different from Aus it seems. Advice from the Government conflicts with advice from GPs for example, watched the programme 30 minutes ago. Mixed messages abound. Doctors want interstate travel restrictions, the authorities don’t. Doctors want massive lock downs, the Government want a different approach. It’s is a mess and opinions vary drastically even amongst experts.

In my opinion it’s very hard to criticise any group, all want a solution but see different ways of achieving it.

Data.

Tests by country based on best available data. Examples

Italy 77,000
UK 30,000
France, Austria, Netherlands circa 6,000
USA 20,000
China 320,000
S Korea 248,000
Russia 77,000
Japan, 10,000. Wow, Olympics around the corner!

When tests are made on a per million population the UK remains top 10 and is one of a few countries who provide updated data several times a day.

This data is of course best available and very rough, some countries data, like Germany, is not available. Caution of course. But to me, despite the roughness of the data it suggests to me the UK is keeping pace with the issue.
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Re: House-arrest

Post by Max B Gold »

BoniO wrote: Mon Mar 16, 2020 1:03 pm
Redline wrote: Mon Mar 16, 2020 12:06 pm
Adz wrote: Mon Mar 16, 2020 9:41 am

Sadly flattening the curve is a load of bollocks. Note the lack of numbers in the charts. It would take years if you applied the numbers to the bell curve, anyone ready for that?
Flattening the curve, as explained by experts in Aus and reiterated by the New Zealand PM to me seems extremely sensible. It’s not about the numbers overall but the numbers the health systems are able to cope with at any one time. It avoids the choice that has happened in Italy at one point where medics had to choose who to treat because they just can’t treat everybody. I’d sooner take their opinions than yours with all due respect.

As for taking years? Who knows. A vaccine will happen along at some time, in the interim it’s about management and management is flattening the curve.

The numbers! What we know is that the majority of recorded cases people sometimes have no real effects, some don’t even know they have it apparently. It’s about managing those cases where people suffer adverse reactions and as we have seen it’s hitting those with chronic conditions the hardest. Hence the oldies like me being asked to isolate, not for our sakes but to reduce the risk burden on the health system.

It’s very clear Governments are learning on the job. That is no criticism of them, this is a massive learning curve which is why things change by the day. It’s really not a time to play party-politics, points scoring and so on. Once all this is over, which it will be at some point, we can all argue the toss, with the benefit of hindsight.
Flattening the curve makes some sense but not at the expense of not taking all possibly draconian measures to contain it first. The government has no excuse from not learning from other Countries who have been much more successful at containing the outbreak. If they'd followed the leads/actions of some other Countries then we probably would be in a much better place. That is very much a criticism and a valid one. When the CSO states that we are looking to a herd immunity solution - at the very likely cost of hundreds of thousands of lives - only for the Health Minister to say we aren't doing that at all - only confuses where absolute clarity in word and action is needed.
If I were to choose the person to lead in a crisis I know who I wouldn't pick.

Bungling Boris has condemned people to death with his dithering and incorrect actions and advice.
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Re: House-arrest

Post by BoniO »

Agreed Max. It's not politicising the issue either. He's just not the man for the job.

On another note, I'm currently in France and under the enforced 15 day lockdown. You can still go out for food and other essentials but all bars/restaurants etc etc are closed down and police and army are making checks if you're found out and about. Luckily I have beer & wine aplenty in stock. Worse things happen at sea. Keep well everyone.
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Re: House-arrest

Post by Max B Gold »

BoniO wrote: Tue Mar 17, 2020 12:40 pm Agreed Max. It's not politicising the issue either. He's just not the man for the job.

On another note, I'm currently in France and under the enforced 15 day lockdown. You can still go out for food and other essentials but all bars/restaurants etc etc are closed down and police and army are making checks if you're found out and about. Luckily I have beer & wine aplenty in stock. Worse things happen at sea. Keep well everyone.
Just had a text from 1690 Bob who says taxi's are rubbish today, so might pop down the supermarket and buy all they beer they have on the shelves. Its not an act of selfishness. I'm just incredibly thirsty.
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Re: House-arrest

Post by tuffers#1 »

point nine one eight wrote: Tue Mar 17, 2020 9:01 am
E10EU wrote: Tue Mar 17, 2020 1:36 am
point nine one eight wrote: Mon Mar 16, 2020 3:33 am

Boris is a Hero sent by him upstairs to save the country from Jeremy Corblimy
Is there as virus that causes ignorance and stupidity?
Seems that Johnson has well and truly fecked this country.

He is Prime Minister and achieved something in life, you are a nothing and will remain so, you poor jealous thing, Go back to following Jeremy the guy who looks like a p*ssed geography teacher
What does being Prime Minister prove ?


Hitler led his county
Stalin led his
Pol pot his
Pinochet his
The list goes on .

" He made something of his life "
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Re: House-arrest

Post by tuffers#1 »

Redline wrote: Tue Mar 17, 2020 1:57 am
Mikero wrote: Tue Mar 17, 2020 12:31 am How can pointing out that the NHS would be having a much easier time of it if the 48,000 nurses that they are short of were in post be political point scoring, it is fact. The flutting of pidgeons coming home to roost is giving some people amnesia.

Mikero
Like I said before. A discussion about how the NHS has been managed/mismanaged for decades is a separate and valid debate. And one that extends way beyond the last decade. And it’s not just a debate about funding but management and planning in general. Very easy to extend the debate to the general population whose habits are increasing pressures on services. A big topic.

The current situation is unique and health services around the globe are struggling. I will say it again, health services around the globe are struggling. Therefore if anybody wants to criticise NHS funding, by the same token that criticism applies to most countries around the globe who are also struggling to cope. The NHS are far from unique in managing this problem.

This is not a difficult concept. The current crisis has not been planned for anywhere in the world. Anywhere in the world.
The major difference is that the NHS is not privately funded .

Its publically funded.
Unlike most of the ". Rest of the World "

We DO NOT PAY at the point of treatment.
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Re: House-arrest

Post by Lucky7 »

Redline wrote: Tue Mar 17, 2020 11:05 am There is no probable about changes every day. There are changes every day. If you wonder about advice given to people, the UK is no different from Aus it seems. Advice from the Government conflicts with advice from GPs for example, watched the programme 30 minutes ago. Mixed messages abound. Doctors want interstate travel restrictions, the authorities don’t. Doctors want massive lock downs, the Government want a different approach. It’s is a mess and opinions vary drastically even amongst experts.

In my opinion it’s very hard to criticise any group, all want a solution but see different ways of achieving it.

Data.

Tests by country based on best available data. Examples

Italy 77,000
UK 30,000
France, Austria, Netherlands circa 6,000
USA 20,000
China 320,000
S Korea 248,000
Russia 77,000
Japan, 10,000. Wow, Olympics around the corner!

When tests are made on a per million population the UK remains top 10 and is one of a few countries who provide updated data several times a day.

This data is of course best available and very rough, some countries data, like Germany, is not available. Caution of course. But to me, despite the roughness of the data it suggests to me the UK is keeping pace with the issue.

Oh I see Dohnut has returned!!😋
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Re: House-arrest

Post by Dohnut »

Lucky7 wrote: Tue Mar 17, 2020 1:45 pm
Redline wrote: Tue Mar 17, 2020 11:05 am There is no probable about changes every day. There are changes every day. If you wonder about advice given to people, the UK is no different from Aus it seems. Advice from the Government conflicts with advice from GPs for example, watched the programme 30 minutes ago. Mixed messages abound. Doctors want interstate travel restrictions, the authorities don’t. Doctors want massive lock downs, the Government want a different approach. It’s is a mess and opinions vary drastically even amongst experts.

In my opinion it’s very hard to criticise any group, all want a solution but see different ways of achieving it.

Data.

Tests by country based on best available data. Examples

Italy 77,000
UK 30,000
France, Austria, Netherlands circa 6,000
USA 20,000
China 320,000
S Korea 248,000
Russia 77,000
Japan, 10,000. Wow, Olympics around the corner!

When tests are made on a per million population the UK remains top 10 and is one of a few countries who provide updated data several times a day.

This data is of course best available and very rough, some countries data, like Germany, is not available. Caution of course. But to me, despite the roughness of the data it suggests to me the UK is keeping pace with the issue.

Oh I see Dohnut has returned!!😋
?
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