Let me dumb it down for you: Biffer is the one who made the prediction, not me. I am merely a concerned onlooker, what with already having been through the mill of having a formerly pleasant England-based Kiwi ex-pat planetrugby poster disappear down the dirty plughole of conspiracy theories and apocalyptic nightmaresEnergiseR2 wrote: ↑Fri Apr 14, 2023 10:02 amHow very right wing of you. Call me a windowlicker and then post that. I'd take the time to be confused only am not arsed.JM2K6 wrote: ↑Fri Apr 14, 2023 7:24 amA non windowlicker would've been able to tell the difference between me and Biffer for a startEnergiseR2 wrote: ↑Thu Apr 13, 2023 2:27 pm
So I am a windowlicker and you are 'predicting' that YMX is an antisemite. YMX I warn you I have Jewish friends so this cabal of ours will be fraught with peril
So, coronavirus...
This is a bit worrying along with the fall in MMR vaccination rates. We are falling below the levels required to ensure herd immunity for a number of nasty diseases. All those bampot anti-vaxxers during covid have driven an increase in vaccine hesitancy, they have a lot to answer for!
https://www.bbc.co.uk/news/health-65372941
https://www.bbc.co.uk/news/health-65372941
Fucking hell, not getting shots for diphtheria and polio is really serious.dpedin wrote: ↑Mon Apr 24, 2023 1:17 pm This is a bit worrying along with the fall in MMR vaccination rates. We are falling below the levels required to ensure herd immunity for a number of nasty diseases. All those bampot anti-vaxxers during covid have driven an increase in vaccine hesitancy, they have a lot to answer for!
https://www.bbc.co.uk/news/health-65372941
What the fuck is wrong with this country?
And are there two g’s in Bugger Off?
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FFS. It took 15 years for vaccination rates to recover from the damage done by Andrew Wakefield. Guess we are in for the same again.dpedin wrote: ↑Mon Apr 24, 2023 1:17 pm This is a bit worrying along with the fall in MMR vaccination rates. We are falling below the levels required to ensure herd immunity for a number of nasty diseases. All those bampot anti-vaxxers during covid have driven an increase in vaccine hesitancy, they have a lot to answer for!
https://www.bbc.co.uk/news/health-65372941
Line6 HXFX wrote: ↑Fri Apr 14, 2023 9:12 am I still wear a mask when I can, on buses and what not.
Mrs works on wards with covid patients. She could give it me at any point and I could give it to you.
Least I have done everything I can.
Are masks Woke or summut?
I also love wearing all black with a black hoodie and black mask in super markets.
It is awesome being followed by security guards, and then following them, to see how they like it (they don't).
All the money you made will never buy back your soul
- Guy Smiley
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I'm currently enjoying my first bout of Covid. Day 6 today and I'm starting to feel better but I'm still well down on strength. It knocked me for 6 but the weirdest effect was that it reactivated nerve damage I suffered 8 1/2 years ago when I fell onto rocks, cracked my skull and cut my face a bit. For most of the last week I haven't been able to feel my teeth or the lower left half of my face. Nasty, weird vindictive disease.
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Well if you will give licenses to GBeebies, the & then do nothing as the Tories put gutless wonders in the supposed regulators .....Dinsdale Piranha wrote: ↑Mon Apr 24, 2023 1:33 pmFFS. It took 15 years for vaccination rates to recover from the damage done by Andrew Wakefield. Guess we are in for the same again.dpedin wrote: ↑Mon Apr 24, 2023 1:17 pm This is a bit worrying along with the fall in MMR vaccination rates. We are falling below the levels required to ensure herd immunity for a number of nasty diseases. All those bampot anti-vaxxers during covid have driven an increase in vaccine hesitancy, they have a lot to answer for!
https://www.bbc.co.uk/news/health-65372941
The UK doesn't have a 1st Amendment that grifters & loons can hide behind; the powers exist to shutdown these cunts, just look at RTL, but the Politicians have to want the rules enforced, & provide the support.
The world went fucking mental. Performative travel bans, wearing masks outside, not allowing kindergarteners to take of their masks, zero COVID weirdos, China going crazy and on the other side the anti vax nutters. Thank God it's mostly over.EnergiseR2 wrote: ↑Thu Mar 16, 2023 4:23 pm There is no question it was serious for a period and knocked out a load of old vulnerable people. Did it warrant the response we got and was sustained? Nah
Hindsight is a wonderful thing! The reality in the early days of covid was no-one knew how bad it was or could be so a standard PH approach is to be safe rather than sorry and to try and limit community spread of the disease as early as possible and buy time to find out what it is we are dealing with. In the early days info was very limited on covid and what its IFR/CFR was. The WhatsApp exchange between the Blonde Bumbelcunt and his advisors in mid 2020, released as part of the Hancock story, highlighted this as well as his poor understanding of the numbers - see attached.Calculon wrote: ↑Sat Apr 29, 2023 2:47 pmThe world went fucking mental. Performative travel bans, wearing masks outside, not allowing kindergarteners to take of their masks, zero COVID weirdos, China going crazy and on the other side the anti vax nutters. Thank God it's mostly over.EnergiseR2 wrote: ↑Thu Mar 16, 2023 4:23 pm There is no question it was serious for a period and knocked out a load of old vulnerable people. Did it warrant the response we got and was sustained? Nah
https://www.independent.co.uk/voices/bo ... 92682.html
If the IFR/CFR was as they thought at the time, as Yates points out, we could have had 660,000 deaths in the UK. These were the figures the UK Gov were working with at the time and prior to any vaccination being available. On any measure this would have been disastrous for the UK, regardless of how old the folk dying. Apart from the elderly we also didn't know which groups were most threatened by covid. However PH measures and then the vaccine reduced this risk dramatically.
Was the response at the time the right one? Could we have done more/less/better? Definitely yes but we need to be pretty clear about this and not base it on individual prejudices. Hopefully a national review of the UK Gov response will highlight how we will react quicker/better/cheaper to the next pandemic ....and there will be a next one, and it might be more deadly.
Calculon wrote: ↑Sat Apr 29, 2023 2:47 pmThe world went fucking mental. Performative travel bans, wearing masks outside, not allowing kindergarteners to take of their masks, zero COVID weirdos, China going crazy and on the other side the anti vax nutters. Thank God it's mostly over.EnergiseR2 wrote: ↑Thu Mar 16, 2023 4:23 pm There is no question it was serious for a period and knocked out a load of old vulnerable people. Did it warrant the response we got and was sustained? Nah
I drink and I forget things.
Again hindsight is a wonderful thing and any proper review of what was done will flag up what went well and what didnt. As I said earlier decisions were made on what was known at the time and you cannot blame folk if in hindsight if 'elements' of their response were unnecessary. It would have been feckin difficult to be faced with an unknown virus pandemic and then sit down knowing little about how it was being transmitted and decide what 'elements' of the response were necessary and which were unnecessary, if you think the whole pop is at risk you throw the kitchen sink at it and buy time to work out what to do! Your comments suggests you only put your seat belt on and turn on the airbags before driving when you know you are going to have an accident?EnergiseR2 wrote: ↑Mon May 01, 2023 6:02 am That would work if only the people who led out on Irelands response, one of the strictest in Europe, hadn't since said elements were unnecessary.
- mat the expat
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Which was impossible to predict at the time.EnergiseR2 wrote: ↑Mon May 01, 2023 6:02 am That would work if only the people who led out on Irelands response, one of the strictest in Europe, hadn't since said elements were unnecessary.
FFS - you'd be one of those with Pitchforks demanding action if the situation was reversed.
So much knowledge - did you volunteer that to the experts at the time?
- mat the expat
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EnergiseR2 wrote: ↑Mon May 01, 2023 12:38 pm I was a well known online PR advocate for change. Seriously though I did engage with politicians on the matter and have been politically engaged most of my life. I was right on most things and that comforts me as I like being right.
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Anecdotal but for my family the (continuing) effects of lockdown have been far, far more serious than the effects of Covid would likely have beenCalculon wrote: ↑Sat Apr 29, 2023 2:47 pmThe world went fucking mental. Performative travel bans, wearing masks outside, not allowing kindergarteners to take of their masks, zero COVID weirdos, China going crazy and on the other side the anti vax nutters. Thank God it's mostly over.EnergiseR2 wrote: ↑Thu Mar 16, 2023 4:23 pm There is no question it was serious for a period and knocked out a load of old vulnerable people. Did it warrant the response we got and was sustained? Nah
Old men forget: yet all shall be forgot, But he'll remember with advantages, What feats he did that day
Looks like you got lost!mat the expat wrote: ↑Mon May 01, 2023 2:19 pmEnergiseR2 wrote: ↑Mon May 01, 2023 12:38 pm I was a well known online PR advocate for change. Seriously though I did engage with politicians on the matter and have been politically engaged most of my life. I was right on most things and that comforts me as I like being right.
Wrong forum.
Not to worry, here you go
https://forum.planetrugby.com/viewforum.php?f=3
- mat the expat
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Sorry Bambi?Ymx wrote: ↑Mon May 01, 2023 5:50 pmLooks like you got lost!mat the expat wrote: ↑Mon May 01, 2023 2:19 pmEnergiseR2 wrote: ↑Mon May 01, 2023 12:38 pm I was a well known online PR advocate for change. Seriously though I did engage with politicians on the matter and have been politically engaged most of my life. I was right on most things and that comforts me as I like being right.
Wrong forum.
Not to worry, here you go
https://forum.planetrugby.com/viewforum.php?f=3
Don't you have something anti-Vax to write?
It is difficult one and you are right it is anecdotal but the impact of the pandemic has been multi factorial and impacted everyone differently. For me it was suffering a dangerous pulmonary embolism that could have killed me! Thankfully I am back to full fitness apart from having to take blood thinners for the rest of my life. Who knows how covid could have affected you or your family? However for the 166,000 families who lost a loved one and the hundreds of thousands who have suffered and may still suffer from long covid then the pandemic has been equally a nightmare.Paddington Bear wrote: ↑Mon May 01, 2023 2:41 pmAnecdotal but for my family the (continuing) effects of lockdown have been far, far more serious than the effects of Covid would likely have beenCalculon wrote: ↑Sat Apr 29, 2023 2:47 pmThe world went fucking mental. Performative travel bans, wearing masks outside, not allowing kindergarteners to take of their masks, zero COVID weirdos, China going crazy and on the other side the anti vax nutters. Thank God it's mostly over.EnergiseR2 wrote: ↑Thu Mar 16, 2023 4:23 pm There is no question it was serious for a period and knocked out a load of old vulnerable people. Did it warrant the response we got and was sustained? Nah
There are no winners during a major pandemic ... apart from Tory MPs, donors, mates and crooks who made millions from selling us dodgy PPE, testing kit, consultancy, disaster capitalists, oil and gas companies, loans to non existent companies, etc - they are about the only winners.
The key thing from early in the pandemic is that we were, frankly, guessing about the trade offs you mention, because one side of the trade had no information associated with it. They didn't know if it was more dangerous to risk your exposure to the disease on top of the horrible disease you were suffering / recovering from (apols, not clear which stage you were at the time). Utterly shit position for everyone but the public health response is to err on the side of caution towards the unknown factor.
And are there two g’s in Bugger Off?
From here https://www.theguardian.com/society/202 ... s-research
from here
https://nhscharitiestogether.co.uk/6000 ... -pandemic/
I said before that my next door neighbour is a medical researcher but was called into the wards because she is also a qualified nurse. I liken it to new conscripts being called up to fight on the front line, replacing the ones who have fallen.
This was pre-vaccine, she didn't know how serious it was, all she knew was that people were on ventilators and some were dying and they didn't have the equipment they needed. She didn't know if she was taking the virus back to her young family when she did get to see them.
It was fucking awful for everyone, from those in the wards, patients and staff, to those who couldn't attend funerals to those who couldn't get the care they desperately needed.
What would be tragic is that if we don't learn from the past three years and don't prepare for the next one, whatever it might be.
andAt least 77,000 hospital staff in England caught coronavirus during the pandemic, while there were nearly a quarter of a million absences for Covid-related reasons, Guardian research has revealed.
However, the true totals are likely to be much higher, because out of the 142 acute and specialist trusts in England sent freedom of information requests, only 55% (78) provided figures on staff who were infected, while 60% (85) gave data on time off for sick leave related to the virus.
The responses, which cover the year following 1 March 2020, offer the first official data on Covid’s impact on frontline workers who risked their own health while caring for the more than 400,000 patients who have ended up seriously ill in hospital.
They show that at least 77,735 doctors, nurses and other hospital personnel contracted Covid, while staff had 243,864 periods of absence – either because they had the disease or were isolating, quarantining or shielding – exacerbating existing workforce shortages.
Of the trusts sent requests, 75 (53%) provided figures on infected staff who went on to die of Covid, totalling 152 deaths. This appears to underestimate the total, given that ministers have already acknowledged at least 305 deaths involving Covid-19 among healthcare workers.
from here
https://nhscharitiestogether.co.uk/6000 ... -pandemic/
An estimated 60,000 NHS workers could be living with post-traumatic stress as a result of the Covid-19 pandemic, new research suggests.1 With nine in ten NHS staff (89%) saying it will take many years for them to recover from the pandemic
I said before that my next door neighbour is a medical researcher but was called into the wards because she is also a qualified nurse. I liken it to new conscripts being called up to fight on the front line, replacing the ones who have fallen.
This was pre-vaccine, she didn't know how serious it was, all she knew was that people were on ventilators and some were dying and they didn't have the equipment they needed. She didn't know if she was taking the virus back to her young family when she did get to see them.
It was fucking awful for everyone, from those in the wards, patients and staff, to those who couldn't attend funerals to those who couldn't get the care they desperately needed.
What would be tragic is that if we don't learn from the past three years and don't prepare for the next one, whatever it might be.
I'm sorry about your illness and experiences during covid but as others have said no-one knew what they were dealing with in the early days and we certainly didnt know how serious it was or could have been for the population as a whole. As the pandemic evolved we did learn more about the virus and who was most at risk but even then treatments were still evolving and throughout 2020 medics were struggling to know how to manage and treat covid patients - remember the early rush for ventilators but then changed to CPAP machines as ventilators were found to do as much harm for some patients as they did good for others. There were no pharmaceuticals which medics could depend on unless you believed Trump with his bleach and ivermectin options. In most of 2020 the NHS was trying to protect everyone not just the vulnerable and it was a difficult balancing act for medics many of whom were working all the hours in hugely restrictive PPE and not confident they weren't exposing themselves to a deadly disease. I had numerous mates who are docs who fell into the vulnerable age group who went in to work in the wards not knowing if they were going to catch it and die. Unfortunately this did mean their own patients in their own specialities were having to wait for treatment but the most serious and at risk ones were still seen and treated. However capacity for other work across the hospital was drastically reduced as, for example, theatres and recovery areas were converted into ICUs and theatre staff asked to work in ICU or Critical Care and as a consequence surgical work was dramatically reduced. Everyone including student docs and nurses, NHS admin staff and retired folk were drafted in to work in the hospitals and they were all heroes in my eyes.EnergiseR2 wrote: ↑Tue May 02, 2023 9:11 am You and Mat can't be honest brokers anymore than some anti vaxer could be. You are compromised. We all are. My position was based on the fact I was unwell prior to the pandemic, vulnerable in covid parlance, and suddenly my illness didn't really matter. No scans. No consultants. The odd phone call to a lad just finished aggressive cancer treatment. And before you try and justify that don't bother. The world lost its mind for a disease that was not that serious for the vast vast majority of people. The point I made at the time was if the world was so worried about protecting the vulnerable why did I keep getting sepsis when on chemo. Because life and risk has trade offs and the risk to people on chemo has to be balanced with all of other wifes needs and pressures. It was managed appalingly and people who questioned it got labeled as anti vaxers and extremists when were neither. I support vaccination in all its for.s though to be fair questioning children being forced to get a vaccine for something that is zero risk to them is prudent. Of course there is now recriminations and of course the supporters like you don't want to admit you were wrong.
You make it sound like it is a 'them v us' argument and I dont think that is a fair assessment to make. As I said earlier there were no winners in dealing with a pandemic of a new and dangerous virus, many folk suffered in one way or another. However as I also said earlier hindsight is a wonderful thing and to say we shouldn't have done x, y or z because of a 'disease which was not that serious for the vast majority of people' is unfair given when the pandemic spread in early 2020 we didn't know this at all so a prudent and safety first response was essential to slow community transmission and buy time in order to find out what we were dealing with. There are no recriminations, I am not sure what you think I 'support' nor am I sure what you think it is I dont want to admit I got wrong?
Re vaccinations - we vaccinate children for many diseases for which there is a infinitesimally small risk of them catching it, however given how safe vaccines are we decide for the greater good to vaccinate everyone when they are children in order to minimise harm to society as a whole ie diphtheria, tetanus. We also vaccinate children against common diseases/viruses which are very common or spread easily but might have a big impact on a very small number who catch it ie flu. Given how safe the covid vaccine is then surely it is worth considering it for children particularly those at risk?
Mate, you’re still here. Don’t let your bitterness consume you. It’s not healthy.EnergiseR2 wrote: ↑Tue May 02, 2023 5:12 pm There were winners. You won. People who thought we should lock down to keep them safe. They won.
The left v right stuff didn't really kick in immediately.EnergiseR2 wrote: ↑Tue May 02, 2023 5:06 pm I fundamentally disagree with many of your points. I did then and I do now. I also resented then being made feel like an extremist for thinking letting people die on their own was disgusting. The whole thing got wrapped up in left amd right and culture wars bollox. The scenes in Italy at the start were 100% politically driven yet we trotted along like twats. It really is eye boggingly bad and I suppose it is some small consolation that men and women who were in charge have started admitting they fucked up
And are there two g’s in Bugger Off?
I’m not sure about them feeling like they won. Over a year ago dpedin was desperate to return to mandated mask wearing and other restrictions. JM was quite vocal as well.EnergiseR2 wrote: ↑Tue May 02, 2023 5:12 pm There were winners. You won. People who thought we should lock down to keep them safe. They won.
We didn’t return to their desired restrictions.
Mar 22
dpedin wrote: ↑Sat Mar 19, 2022 1:27 pmI would rather have been in NZ which has had about 1% of the UK deaths, fewer days with the population locked down than the UK and an economy which has performed at least as good if not better than the UK. They now have a higher vaccination rate than the UK. NZ has no where near the waiting times nor backlogs in its healthcare system compared to the NHS in the UK. Sounds to me NZ did rather well?Ymx wrote: ↑Fri Mar 18, 2022 10:40 pm Guy, you’re living under the NZ experience, which is behind the rest of the world in terms of the endemic (and brilliantly behind on deaths of course), and more subject to state controlled media. So I don’t know the typical kiwi reflects the global view very well.
My views have evolved admittedly.
I don’t think mandating mask wearing is ever going to be the way forward. And especially where there is zero end game. Except in the temporary conditions I stated above.
There has been less flu, and cold because of it, yes of course. And consequently, it’s probably going to hammer many immune systems when they do start getting exposed to it again. Like the super cold we had here in the UK last year. It’s the way we are built. Immunological memory reduces severity and keeps us alive.
The point of wearing masks, distancing where possible, opening windows and ensuring good ventilation, etc when we have a highly infectious air borne virus circulating is to try and reduce community transmission - simples! The end game is to try and avoid people contracting covid and therefore reduce pressure on the NHS (15,000 covid hospitalisations at the moment means the NHS can't possibly operate normally) and at the same time buy time so we can continue to vaccinate the pop and improve the vaccines and other treatments on offer. I am confident that the scientific community will do both relatively quickly given how fast they were able to develop the initial vaccines. I am in no doubt from what I hear that we will have even more effective vaccines and treatments by the end of this year. This is the end game.
The scientists will of course continue to develop new improved vaccines and treatments if we don't follow the simple PH mitigations and just give up on trying to control community transmission. We will reach the same end point but the difference will be how we get there - letting it run loose means we will continue to have far more cases, more hospitalisations and more deaths and a real risk of further lock downs. I don't want lock downs! This seems to be the UK approach, which so far has been one of the worst performing in terms of deaths and economics. Letting a novel and deadly virus with as yet not fully understood long term implications run unchecked in a population is just plain stupid. Not taking even the simplest of PH mitigations when we have very high levels of cases and hospitalisations is just plain stupid.
Dec 21
JM2K6 wrote: ↑Thu Dec 02, 2021 8:44 pmOK, but you do realise the our "freedom" has been really fucking stupid, right?
Not entirely sure what's being argued here - there was another deadly wave in early 2022. Thanks to the vaccine situation, nowhere near as bad as the first two, but significantly worse than the following one. We could have avoided that.
But more pertinently, it happened and I moved on. I haven't argued for mass use of masks or for further lockdowns. I've defended people who continue to use masks.
There's absolutely zero chance this is a good faith argument so I'm not sure why I'm bothering but hey there was a notification so here I am
But more pertinently, it happened and I moved on. I haven't argued for mass use of masks or for further lockdowns. I've defended people who continue to use masks.
There's absolutely zero chance this is a good faith argument so I'm not sure why I'm bothering but hey there was a notification so here I am
I think he was replying to me, as I suggested those who wanted to ramp up restrictions again (in the UK), didn’t get their way (didn’t win).EnergiseR2 wrote: ↑Wed May 03, 2023 12:26 pm Are you saying my argument isn't in good faith? To be fair I don't remember all your posts and you have a pretty narrow view of mine so we'll have to accept we haven't got a clue about what the other person thinks
JM thought it was “really fucking stupid” to have relaxed them. And dpedin wanted to, and possibly still wants them back.
I haven't read your argument, but given its you I'm prepared to tend to it not being.EnergiseR2 wrote: ↑Wed May 03, 2023 12:26 pm Are you saying my argument isn't in good faith? To be fair I don't remember all your posts and you have a pretty narrow view of mine so we'll have to accept we haven't got a clue about what the other person thinks
And are there two g’s in Bugger Off?
I think you probably should before commenting then. His cancer treatment was massively compromised over lockdown.Biffer wrote: ↑Wed May 03, 2023 8:53 pmI haven't read your argument, but given its you I'm prepared to tend to it not being.EnergiseR2 wrote: ↑Wed May 03, 2023 12:26 pm Are you saying my argument isn't in good faith? To be fair I don't remember all your posts and you have a pretty narrow view of mine so we'll have to accept we haven't got a clue about what the other person thinks
Yeah, right enough, I'm bang out of order there.Ymx wrote: ↑Wed May 03, 2023 8:56 pmI think you probably should before commenting then. His cancer treatment was massively compromised over lockdown.Biffer wrote: ↑Wed May 03, 2023 8:53 pmI haven't read your argument, but given its you I'm prepared to tend to it not being.EnergiseR2 wrote: ↑Wed May 03, 2023 12:26 pm Are you saying my argument isn't in good faith? To be fair I don't remember all your posts and you have a pretty narrow view of mine so we'll have to accept we haven't got a clue about what the other person thinks
Sorry ER2
And are there two g’s in Bugger Off?
- mat the expat
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I was at risk the whole time from Covid.EnergiseR2 wrote: ↑Tue May 02, 2023 5:06 pm I fundamentally disagree with many of your points. I did then and I do now. I also resented then being made feel like an extremist for thinking letting people die on their own was disgusting. The whole thing got wrapped up in left amd right and culture wars bollox. The scenes in Italy at the start were 100% politically driven yet we trotted along like twats. It really is eye boggingly bad and I suppose it is some small consolation that men and women who were in charge have started admitting they fucked up
I find your arguments completely disingenuous
Stop sounding like an old woman FFS
It be would have been wholly possible for scans and diagnostics to have been continued along with COVID restrictions if and it's a big if, systems allowed this.
I still love in a Covid world where people are dying of the virus and full PPE is worn.
We as a world were not ready for the virus and I am not wholly sure we're in a much better position now.
Management of health service systems across borders is appalling
I still love in a Covid world where people are dying of the virus and full PPE is worn.
We as a world were not ready for the virus and I am not wholly sure we're in a much better position now.
Management of health service systems across borders is appalling
Covid restrictions meant I couldn't visit my mother in hospital for more than an hour each day. Slowly she deteriorated to the point we were told she only had days to live... luckily Covid restrictions were lifted when she was moved to her own room (for her last few days) and I then spent every waking hour with her... revived her, got her drinking and eating again... and she was moved back onto the ward... and eventually after a couple of months, we took her home... and a year later she is still with us.
I don't resent the restrictions though as I saw what it was like in hospital while I was there... Covid was still quite rampant, elderly patients on her ward were dying from it... and staff were getting very ill. It just felt like a terrible time... rather than needing to resent anyone. I just hated the virus.
I don't resent the restrictions though as I saw what it was like in hospital while I was there... Covid was still quite rampant, elderly patients on her ward were dying from it... and staff were getting very ill. It just felt like a terrible time... rather than needing to resent anyone. I just hated the virus.
C69 wrote: ↑Thu May 04, 2023 7:35 am It be would have been wholly possible for scans and diagnostics to have been continued along with COVID restrictions if and it's a big if, systems allowed this.
I still love in a Covid world where people are dying of the virus and full PPE is worn.
We as a world were not ready for the virus and I am not wholly sure we're in a much better position now.
Management of health service systems across borders is appalling
We know that now. We didn't at the time.
Let's remember it was a coronavirus - the two previous coronaviruses that jumped to humans had fatality rates of 50% & 30%.
Also, there are aspects where we are more ready, such as vaccine development where the aim in the science community is to have a vaccine ready in 100 days for future pandemics (which might mean they don’t become pandemics). It’s politically where there’s a problem.
Last edited by Biffer on Thu May 04, 2023 9:35 am, edited 1 time in total.
And are there two g’s in Bugger Off?
This - I was getting scans during 2020 and 2021 because of PE and subsequent lump found on my thymus. I presume it depended on levels of risk and clinical need? I know many radiographers were redeployed into other clinical areas or off with covid so imaging capacity was down significantly.C69 wrote: ↑Thu May 04, 2023 7:35 am It be would have been wholly possible for scans and diagnostics to have been continued along with COVID restrictions if and it's a big if, systems allowed this.
I still love in a Covid world where people are dying of the virus and full PPE is worn.
We as a world were not ready for the virus and I am not wholly sure we're in a much better position now.
Management of health service systems across borders is appalling
I was in hospital in early 2022 for an op and spent 12 hours in ICU before going to CC then ward following a sternotomy and it was well organised bedlam. There were immunocompromised patients in ICU in separate rooms getting 1-to-1 care from nurses completely covered in PPE and who were in room for hours at a time. Any supplies or food etc was left outside and they had to collect at the door. Getting PPE on/off took about 10 mins for staff and another to check them - hugely time consuming and drained resources. They came out looking completely knackered and in one case in tears because of the stress and environment they were working in. The protocols the staff had to follow to ensure infection control were huge yet no complaints and no grudges about mask wearing. My ICU nurse had left her kid, she was a single mum, with her parents when she was working her 4 shifts that week as she didnt want to endanger them nor her patients. I have huge respect for all the NHS staff and absolutely none for the armchair critics who constantly moaned like spoiled kids about wearing a simple mask or washing their hands during a pandemic.
We did get another wave as a result. Again, what exactly are you arguing here - that my saying relaxing restrictions at that time was fucking stupid was shown to be wrong or that just from an ideological perspective it was an insane angle? I am curious. If I'm being held up as some sort of hardline lockdown fanatic it would be good to know exactly what I'm being accused of.Ymx wrote: ↑Wed May 03, 2023 2:16 pmI think he was replying to me, as I suggested those who wanted to ramp up restrictions again (in the UK), didn’t get their way (didn’t win).EnergiseR2 wrote: ↑Wed May 03, 2023 12:26 pm Are you saying my argument isn't in good faith? To be fair I don't remember all your posts and you have a pretty narrow view of mine so we'll have to accept we haven't got a clue about what the other person thinks
JM thought it was “really fucking stupid” to have relaxed them. And dpedin wanted to, and possibly still wants them back.
Same with my family. Once all the vulnerable people, mostly olds and fatties, had a chance to be vaccinated, restrictions really should have been liftedPaddington Bear wrote: ↑Mon May 01, 2023 2:41 pmAnecdotal but for my family the (continuing) effects of lockdown have been far, far more serious than the effects of Covid would likely have beenCalculon wrote: ↑Sat Apr 29, 2023 2:47 pmThe world went fucking mental. Performative travel bans, wearing masks outside, not allowing kindergarteners to take of their masks, zero COVID weirdos, China going crazy and on the other side the anti vax nutters. Thank God it's mostly over.EnergiseR2 wrote: ↑Thu Mar 16, 2023 4:23 pm There is no question it was serious for a period and knocked out a load of old vulnerable people. Did it warrant the response we got and was sustained? Nah
Huge amount of hindsight here, with people ignoring the situation as it was at the time.
1. It was a novel coronavirus
2. The previous two novel coronaviruses had fatality rates of 50% and 30%
3. This one looked far more infectious than the previous two
If it had a fatality rate of even 5%, alongside what looked at the time as pre symptomatic infection of others, there would have been hundreds of millions dead over three years, rather than the 20 million or so the WHO estimates (and that looks like a conservative figure tbh).
There’s a lot of revisionism which seems to be along the lines of ‘we should have known it would have been like this’ it given the previous evidence of closely related viruses jumping into humans in the previous two decades, that’s frankly utter bullshit.
1. It was a novel coronavirus
2. The previous two novel coronaviruses had fatality rates of 50% and 30%
3. This one looked far more infectious than the previous two
If it had a fatality rate of even 5%, alongside what looked at the time as pre symptomatic infection of others, there would have been hundreds of millions dead over three years, rather than the 20 million or so the WHO estimates (and that looks like a conservative figure tbh).
There’s a lot of revisionism which seems to be along the lines of ‘we should have known it would have been like this’ it given the previous evidence of closely related viruses jumping into humans in the previous two decades, that’s frankly utter bullshit.
And are there two g’s in Bugger Off?