Corona Virus

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

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  1. BonnieCat

    BonnieCat Crème de la Crème

    Feb 20, 2016
    3,422
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    Netherlands
    Netherlands News

    The Dutch government outlined its road map to ease the coronavirus restrictions on Wednesday, with prime minister Mark Rutte saying there is room to relax some of the rules as long as hospitals are not overloaded and the elderly and people in poor health remain protected. The message, the prime minister said, is switching from ‘stay home as much as possible’ to ‘stay home if you have symptoms’, but the 1.5 metre rule will remain and people are encouraged to work from home as much as possible and avoid busy places.

    Hairdressers and other professions can restart operations from May 11, cafes and restaurants will be able to open from June 1 – within limits – and face masks will also be compulsory on public transport from that date. The next steps are to help the economy as well as to give everyone in the country the space to look forward and make plans, Rutte said. ‘We will have to live with the virus for a longer period – the new normal – while we wait for the development of a vaccine,’ health minister Hugo de Jonge said. ‘The three aims remain to protect the vulnerable, make sure the health service does not become overloaded and to get greater insight into the way the virus spreads. This means we can steer it more accurately.’ Testing is also being stepped up to include more categories, with police and public transport workers being added to the list mid May.

    By June, De Jonge said, everyone who is showing symptoms of coronavirus will be able to be tested. Testing will also be followed by an intensive tracking programme organised by local health boards so that ‘we can put out the flame, wherever it flares up,’ De Jonge said. Currently fewer than 10% of tests are showing up positive, the minister said. Asked why face masks are now being made compulsory on public transport, the prime minister said that government advisors say there is some evidence that the correct use of masks can be useful in situations in which social distancing is not possible. ‘Their use is not primarily to protect yourself but to protect others,’ Rutte said. The government, he said, is also in talks with employers groups and other organisations to look at ways to reorganise working hours to better spread passengers across public transport. ‘There will be problems which arise which we have not taken into account, but it is possible to come to practical solutions, and we have shown we can do that in the past few weeks,’ Rutte said.
    The deadlines:
    May 11: The message will switch from ‘stay at home as much as possible’ to ‘stay at home if you have symptoms’, but the 1.5 metre rule will remain and people are encouraged to work at home if possible. Experiments with allowing visits to nursing homes will also start up, involving one home in each of the 25 local health board areas. Two weeks later, visits will be increased if the experiment is successful. Hair salons, beauticians and nail bars and the like can open again on condition they work by appointment only and as long as they check with clients in advance that they have no symptoms. Face masks are not compulsory but chairs must be 1.5 metres from each other. The over-18s can resume outdoor sports which do not involve physical contact, such as tennis and golf, can resume but competitions are not allowed. Groups of up to 10 can take part in outdoor sports together as long as there is no contact. Libraries can reopen, as long as they bring in measures to enforce the 1.5 metre rule. As announced earlier, primary schools and daycare centres will reopen. Schools must divide classes in half and the government recommends pupils attend on alternate days rather than half days in order to reduce pressure on public transport and outside space.

    June 1: Public transport will start running normal services again. Travellers must wear a ‘non-medical’ face mask and a maximum of 40% of seats may be occupied. People who don’t wear a mask can be fined. The size of the fine still has to be worked out. Secondary schools will reopen and the exact details still have to be worked out. Cafe and restaurant terraces can reopen as long as everyone sits at a table and there is 1.5 metres between tables. Restaurants, concert halls theatres and cinemas can reopen to a maximum of 30 guests, seated 1.5 metres apart and by reservation only. Museums can reopen on condition tickets are sold in advance and the 1.5 metre rule is maintained.

    July 1 Campsites and holiday parks can reopen completely, including communal washrooms and toilet facilities. Restaurants, theatres and cinemas can scale up to a maximum of 100 people, seated 1.5 metres apart and by reservation only. Churches, mosques, crematoria and congress centres can also open for up to 100 people.

    July 15 Practical exams and lessons to resume at trade schools September 1 The ban on festivals and large organised events is due to be lifted but the government has pledged to give an update prior to the deadline. Saunas, sex clubs, casinos and sports clubs can reopen and contact sports will also be permitted. The government is looking into the option of reopening sports clubs and gyms earlier, if solutions can be found to specific problems. Foreign travel Travel abroad is currently restricted to essential travel only and any easing here will depend on other countries as well, Rutte said. All the measures depend on a continued reduction in the infection rate and each measure will be given final approval a week before the deadline.

    Read more at DutchNews.nl:
     
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  2. Wessa

    Wessa Cruising

    Apr 27, 2016
    11,624
    1,000
    North West England
    Sounds like you guy's are starting to get back to some sense of normality :):)
     
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  3. Rspete

    Rspete Elite Member

    Jun 17, 2018
    1,794
    743
    Durham
    Seems to be getting worse up here, a friend of mine and his wife has it and 2 other group of friends have lost loved ones because of covid.
     
  4. BonnieCat

    BonnieCat Crème de la Crème

    Feb 20, 2016
    3,422
    1,000
    Netherlands
    Hope everyone recovers ok. Sorry to hear all this. :worried:
     
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  5. BonnieCat

    BonnieCat Crème de la Crème

    Feb 20, 2016
    3,422
    1,000
    Netherlands
    Thank goodness yes. It looks like I might be able to take Cyril the campervan somewhere after July 1st. May not be able to go into Germany but I can at least explore a bit more of the Netherlands.

    For those of us on their own, and hate being on their own, not being able to visit family and friends or take a holiday has been particularly difficult, very difficult.
     
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  6. SleepyOwl

    SleepyOwl Crème de la Crème

    Jul 26, 2019
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    Nicola Sturgeon just announced that Scotland will remain in lockdown with no relaxation
     
  7. andypandy

    andypandy Crème de la Crème

    Jan 10, 2016
    4,082
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    Shaw
    That's because she's got the bastards right where she wants 'em, she's not going to let go now.:D
     
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  8. Tallpaul

    Tallpaul Noble Member

    Apr 7, 2019
    607
    393
    Kidderminster
    She will let up if they promise to vote for independence...…..
     
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  9. Dave49

    Dave49 Elite Member

    Dec 30, 2019
    1,285
    800
    SW Scotland
    She is quite right. The evidence doesn't support any material easing of the lockdown yet, much as we would all like it. The figures of deaths and infections are still too high, there is very little testing, and the disease is not under control yet.
     
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  10. andypandy

    andypandy Crème de la Crème

    Jan 10, 2016
    4,082
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    Shaw
    The answer is obvious isn't it ?
    Let the effin BBC decide when, where and what. They know everything.
    Don't they ? ;)
     
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  11. Steve Hill

    Steve Hill Senior Member

    Dec 26, 2019
    557
    193
    Somerset
    You may be surprised how many people do agree with you
     
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  12. Wessa

    Wessa Cruising

    Apr 27, 2016
    11,624
    1,000
    North West England
    I hope Boris does not give in and keeps the lock down for a few more weeks, before starting easing the restrictions.
     
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  13. freck

    freck Elite Member

    May 4, 2017
    1,718
    750
    Preston, Lancs, UK
    I can’t see it; the Government is under a lot of pressure from all sides to ease restrictions, or at least have a plan for it right now.
    I can see any easing will be a long and slow process too, when it comes.
     
  14. Wessa

    Wessa Cruising

    Apr 27, 2016
    11,624
    1,000
    North West England
    I guess we will see on Sunday......
     
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  15. andypandy

    andypandy Crème de la Crème

    Jan 10, 2016
    4,082
    1,000
    Shaw
    And my pub would be open on Friday night, yes ?
     
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  16. crispey

    crispey crispey creme de la creme

    Nov 6, 2014
    7,227
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    Uk
    FFS watch ITV or channel 4 then:cool:
     
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  17. thebiglad

    thebiglad Old fart, still riding !

    Sep 25, 2013
    5,066
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    Central France
    This is the Latest News - 7th May - France & Covid 19

    infographie_deconfinement_-_020520.jpg
     
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  18. Sandi T

    Sandi T It's ride o'clock somewhere!
    Subscriber

    Dec 3, 2018
    22,425
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    Tucson Arizona
    Thanks for this very informative post, Nikki. It will be interesting to see what impact these measures have on outcomes in the Netherlands. I'm don't feel very confident that some of the measures being implemented have much basis in fact or if they serve to help us feel like we're "doing something". Outcomes will help us determine that hopefully. I even questioned where the Six Feet Distance recommendation came from and whether that was a random "feel good" distance or based on something concrete. I did see an article addressing it but not really confirming it in a very objective way. If a large person sneezes in your vicinity, back up because their sneeze has more "power" behind it! If a small person does, well, six feet is perhaps adequate.

    The major problem I see in the U.S. is that we're all over the map in terms of consistent behaviors among citizens as well as our "leaders" who are terrible role models for the most part.

    Here's a link to an article I read yesterday about masks that has some really interesting, informative, and useful information. In particular, the quote from the article that's below the link stood out to me.

    https://www.theatlantic.com/health/archive/2020/04/dont-wear-mask-yourself/610336/

    "We can’t know for sure to what degree these success stories are because of masks, but we do know that in every region that has adopted widespread mask-wearing, case and death rates have been reduced within a few weeks."
     
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  19. Sandi T

    Sandi T It's ride o'clock somewhere!
    Subscriber

    Dec 3, 2018
    22,425
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    Tucson Arizona
    I'm really sorry about your friend and his wife, @Rspete, as well as your friends who have lost loved ones. I hope that your friend and his wife recover fully and soon.
     
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  20. Sandi T

    Sandi T It's ride o'clock somewhere!
    Subscriber

    Dec 3, 2018
    22,425
    1,000
    Tucson Arizona
    Our testing in the U.S. is so woeful that the stats and numbers are nearly meaningless. I read last week that the proportion of Arizonans that have been tested is .8% of the state's population. And that does NOT even include the Native American tribes. Additionally, until very recently and still mostly what we see here is that only people who are incredibly ill and exhibit nearly every COVID symptom are the ones being tested. How helpful is that really when one of the biggest concerns is that this virus is a "silent spreader" in that those with no symptoms at all can have the virus and pass it along. I'm always tempted to turn to the data--until I remember that it is so misleading as to not only be unhelpful but also hurtful and damaging.
     
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