Corona Virus

Discussion in 'Lounge' started by Old phart phred, Mar 8, 2020.

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  1. steve lovatt

    steve lovatt Something else

    May 12, 2014
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    North Yorkshire
    Didn't they put a stop to the bell in a ball after the players kicked a Morris Dancer to death? :joy::joy:
     
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  2. MadMrB

    MadMrB Elite Member

    Dec 24, 2018
    3,562
    800
    Northamptonshire, UK
     
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  3. DCS222

    DCS222 Guest

    Bloody hell... did I hear that right? test and trace budget raised to 1/5th of the overall annual NHS budget!!!

    :eyes::eyes::eyes:
     
    • WTF WTF x 3
  4. Callumity

    Callumity Elite Member

    Feb 25, 2017
    3,358
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    Nr Biggar
    And the PCR test remains so badly specified as to be useless. Most of the asymptomatic positives are now non infectious people who have recovered - Elvis has left the building and taken Covid with him.
     
  5. Rooster

    Rooster Grumpy Member
    Subscriber

    Sep 14, 2015
    1,655
    800
    Droitwich, Worcestershire
    Qantas just announced “No Vaccine No Flight” for international flights.

    I believe other airlines will follow.
     
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  6. DCS222

    DCS222 Guest

    AND...
    Jamaican Airlines have stated
    “No woman, no cry!”


    I’ll get me coat...
     
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  7. Tallpaul

    Tallpaul Noble Member

    Apr 7, 2019
    607
    393
    Kidderminster
    Suits me, I'm never going to climb inside another aeroplane anyway.
     
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  8. Rocker

    Rocker Elite Member

    May 1, 2016
    1,662
    800
    Suffolk
    We call them Germ tubes
     
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  9. David Cooper

    David Cooper Triumph Rocketeer.
    Subscriber

    .

    43744.jpg
     
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  10. Sprinter

    Sprinter Kinigit

    Aug 17, 2014
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  11. Sprinter

    Sprinter Kinigit

    Aug 17, 2014
    6,029
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    uk
  12. DCS222

    DCS222 Guest

    Just to add texture to dry statistics

    My local hospitals trust has 13 adult ICU beds split between two hospitals; we currently have 1 spare bed in the trust; in one of our hospitals, 5 out of 7 ventilated patients are Covid patients (not sure about the other)... some of which are imports from hospitals around the country which are already full; it’s a similar situation with the next hospitals Trust northwards and southwards...
     
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  13. Callumity

    Callumity Elite Member

    Feb 25, 2017
    3,358
    800
    Nr Biggar
    #2334 Callumity, Jan 2, 2021
    Last edited: Jan 2, 2021
    Wheels within wheels. In my opinion much of the objectivity about Covid has got lost in a mix of money, politics, power and blame avoidance.

    We know where the virus sits in the panoply of pathogens - comparable with bad flu in its lethality and with post viral fatigue in quite a few victims. However, the PCR test has a false positive rate, according to some studies, of 90+% so best used as confirming symptomatic diagnosis. Throw in NHS underfunding, long shift patterns, self isolation (40% of the workforce in some places) and political terror at being held accountable and you have localised under resourced and overburdened/demoralised units that simply don’t generate the national numbers to suggest a genuine ongoing epidemic. The clinicians can’t see beyond their own firefight but we know of patient transfers the length and breadth of the country.
    I think this is the single most telling illustration of the ‘problem’. This winter, by Public Health England’s own figures, is not one of the worst......and yet the narrative is doom laden. A vaccine provides a fig leaf to restore public confidence but, of course, survivors now have natural immunity just like the original 30+% and collectively we must be on the edge of natural herd immunity. Remember, the numbers going up are ‘PCR cases’ rather than symptomatic admissions which are in line with normal winter conditions. It is probably staff absences (we can’t man the Nightingales) that explain publicised ‘front line’ struggles.

    A3F440F0-3050-4062-B7D3-D01887C29C48.jpeg

    The media have sought sensation over truth at every turn. How many of them actually move further from their computer than me?
     
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  14. Sprinter

    Sprinter Kinigit

    Aug 17, 2014
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    Modern management systems demand a capacity approach. Where you problem solve and always run on or near capacity. Look at the food shortages when the pandemic fear first hit. Dont store units, instead, flow units, to keep costs down, is the modern management approach
    This is carried forward to all systems ( since all out Grad. Student, Business Management, bosses, did the same course at Uni).
    Transport, or Food, or Hospital, Education, Manufacture, etc.
    So it stands to reason that ICU will be near capacity at this time of year.
    More telling, ( although unsurprising and chilling), would be a breakdown of the ages of those currently in ICU beds.
    Bearing in mind the prioritising structures in place atm. The older the patients the less "strain" the ICU's are under.
     
  15. Sprinter

    Sprinter Kinigit

    Aug 17, 2014
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    So is the 50,800 on top of the 94.000, deaths?
     
  16. Callumity

    Callumity Elite Member

    Feb 25, 2017
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    Nr Biggar
    Yes. That is the point. The peak of the pandemic predated mass testing.

    Symptomatic admissions and subsequent deaths were overwhelmingly Covid related. This winter Covid has miraculously eliminated a whole host of other conditions that harvest us and yet overall deaths are down a bit.

    The only reason there are so many deaths are still ascribed to Covid is a test that suggests healthy or otherwise infected patients have it..... some might. Equally we have people complaining their father was labelled a Covid death when terminally ill with late stage Alzheimer’s.
     
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  17. TillyB

    TillyB Active Member

    Dec 24, 2019
    63
    28
    Midlands
    I would suggest that this is much more complicated than a JIT manufacturing model. No demand forecasts would have been in place for this and the fact that there is a global requirement for “stuff” would have muddy this even more. A Holt-Winter regressional model wouldn’t sort this out.
     
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  18. Sprinter

    Sprinter Kinigit

    Aug 17, 2014
    6,029
    1,000
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    I have a least two stories from colleagues, involving close relatives with long term, terminal illnesses, ending up with Covid on the Death Certificates.
     
  19. Callumity

    Callumity Elite Member

    Feb 25, 2017
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    Nr Biggar
    It’s amazing how much inappropriate (not ‘best’) practice has been dumped on organisations not engaged in time phased assembly operations! I once tried explaining to some KPMG ‘consultant’ that they could value a stopped assembly line but running out of ammunition was more serious.
     
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