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Re: Coronavirus
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Re: Coronavirus
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Re: Coronavirus
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I appreciate training to be a nurse or a doctor takes several years, and that importing them isn't really the answer either, but surely the NHS has had years to plan for a solution to their recruitment issues, and that for whatever reason the NHS not adequately being able to crisis manage or plan contingency for staff shortages etc (which are likely, though I'm sure you have better inside info than I do, to be the main reasons something like this puts the NHS under "pressure" aside from the obvious one) isn't really a valid reason to put the general population under restrictions. It's like saying let's close everything in a town because the school is closed as all the teachers and some of the kids have norovirus. The other thing which concerns me is how the virus can spread in hospitals. Yes, I know it's contagious and I know people can have it before they get ill or test positive, but what precautions are they taking to isolate those with covid so they don't spread it? Are patients with covid being kept apart from those who don't? Are the staff changing PPE enough? |
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---------- Post added at 13:21 ---------- Previous post was at 13:17 ---------- Quote:
https://www.telegraph.co.uk/news/202...g-covid-rules/ Indeed the Department for Health and Social Care is now threatening people off with Covid with disciplinary action under pre-Covid rules. https://inews.co.uk/news/health/paid...s-soar-1719806 It doesn't sound very "learning to live with the virus" to not adapt HR policies to account for a virus that individuals will statistically catch two or three times a year. There's no evidence of learning at all. |
Re: Coronavirus
I continue to be unconcerned.
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Re: Coronavirus
I don't see how anyone can ever be immune from infection, in this case Covid. If a virus gets into your nose and throat, you're infected.
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Re: Coronavirus
Lockdown, etc, prevents the infection from spreading.
Vaccines reduce the gravity of infection. On reflection, the term "herd immunity" was insufficiently defined and has thus been hacked to pieces to suit the interpretation of individuals. |
Re: Coronavirus
Herd immunity wasn't insufficiently defined. It's proponents had a very clear definition, Seph. They were simply wrong.
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It can't be immunity from infection. "Herd immunity" can only mean that a critical mass of population has the right antibodies to attack and kill the viral infection. In the Covid case, the medical boffins decided that, because of the deadliness of the Alpha strain, it would be a vaccine that would provide the so-called herd immunity. All the above said, there'll be some boffin on this forum that can put me right. I'm sure you can't normally "get" measles twice but I'm pretty sure that one can become infected (it's obvious really) but the antibodies kill it off before it gets hold. Doesn't that mean that you can be infected with Covid, be asymptomatic (but would test positive), never know you'd got it and then it's gone (like measles). Right? |
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The existing immunity meant that small outbreaks would happen, however would fizzle out, because they’d hit the “wall of immunity” in the population at large. A bit like monkeypox pre-2022. |
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Herd immunity works, just not as perfectly as you would like. ---------- Post added at 00:48 ---------- Previous post was at 00:45 ---------- Quote:
As China is discovering, at great embarassment. |
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