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Re: Coronavirus
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If, and it’s a big if, there is a second wave - I personally don’t see it - it is highly unlikely it would surpass the wave we had in April given the heightened status of the country, hospital admissions and deaths remain low. There is no way “ hundreds of thousands” of deaths would ensue. That is sensationalism of the umpth-degree. As has been said no many times in recent weeks/days, people can now see The direction of travel. Shield the vulnerable, but the general healthy population should just get on with it. Infections will rise, but if -as seems to be the case now - hospital admissions and deaths remain low. You can call it “herd immunity” if you want, I don’t, but I would just call it living with it. Thousands more, anymore that may succumb to any other illness, are not going to die in this country. |
Re: Coronavirus
Zero evidence = the scientific modelling the Government - a Conservative Government - used to go into lockdown and making the largest amount of public expenditure supporting the economy that we’ve seen since the war.
The bad news Pierre is this situation will not unfold on the basis of what you consider “likely”. If you were right in your speculation the numbers wouldn’t be going up at all. At least you accept “herd immunity” is accepting defeat, working from home the norm, social distancing encouraged like in Sweden and the economy tanking anyway. There’s no evidence that hospital admissions will remain low, it’s pure conjecture, and in the absence of a functioning testing mechanism there’s no way to track or control the spread of the virus. Much like February the outcome is inevitable without any mitigation at all. |
Re: Coronavirus
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Get a grip, as you always ask on here, provide evidence to back that up! |
Re: Coronavirus
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You can ignore the evidence as often as you please as it’s particularly uncomfortable for you, however in the absence of improved treatments or mitigation (of which lockdown is the ultimate mitigation) that’s where we end up. I’m at a loss to who wins by wilfully ignoring the science. We aren’t going back to normal so we are stuck in limbo, where the village idiots think it’s a deep state conspiracy, and rational people want to avoid death for them and their loved ones. Is there someone out there hoovering up or shorting stocks? I’d genuinely like to know... I’ve got a perfect grip of the issue at hand. It’s others floundering from one stance to another in denial, to what end is a mystery. |
Re: Coronavirus
I had to check that this wasn't dated April 1st!
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Re: Coronavirus
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So while you’ve witnessed these activities demonised in the newspapers they don’t amount to being the greatest opportunities for the virus to spread. It’s no coincidence that testing has broken when the schools have gone back - many children/young adults in close proximity with minimal distancing. Colleges and universities present the same risk. Mass commuting crammed like cattle onto public transport and 40 hours a week in air conditioned offices all add the greatest opportunities for the virus to spread other than in your own home. Millions of close human contacts every day exchanging germs. A day out at the beach or a Saturday night on the tiles (in particular aggregated over the whole population as many will opt out) bears no comparison to commuting 10 times a week. It does, at face value, appear treatments are helping and yes mitigations in place are helping just now, and have kept figures low over the summer. Removing these mitigations, however, ends one way. |
Re: Coronavirus
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Let's just see if all those being infected at the moment start filling up the hospitals and dying, I think not in my opinion. |
Re: Coronavirus
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You’re only at significant risk on a beach if others on said beach are carrying the virus AND you are in close contact with them for a period of time. When the numbers were driven low in the summer it was statistically unlikely that you’d encounter a person at the beach with the virus, and statistically unlikely you’d catch it from them in an outdoor setting. It’s already acknowledged that those carrying the infections at the moment are in the lower risk age group. They cannot be reliably isolated in the medium to long term from their wider families or from their older colleagues, especially in the absence of an effective test, trace, isolate regime. It’s inevitable then the virus will be in care homes and hospitals. In uncontrolled, unmitigated circumstances exponential growth is inevitable, the NHS overwhelmed and that means deaths. I don’t think you disagree with that statement. It’s wishful thinking that the events of Italy in February won’t happen here if we did/do nothing. The only variable is the mitigation. |
Re: Coronavirus
Just getting back to testing for a sec ..
A mobile test centre turned up in our local town centre today. All our local schools have also been provided with at least 10 tests for staff. |
Re: Coronavirus
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It always falls down the Great Thick British public. |
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I've had 2 in the last 11 days and was provided with a sick bowl........ Maybe if people knew they might think twice. |
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Re: Coronavirus
Opinion pieces by people who disagree does not constitute the model being inaccurate in and of itself.
Sweden did not have a formal lockdown in legislation but there were plenty of behavioural changes that would impact on the model - working from home remains the norm in Sweden, social distancing is encouraged, school years were educated from home. Would that be a satisfactory outcome for the property developers for 40% of the UK workforce to remain working from home? I suspect not. |
Re: Coronavirus
To be fair, "opinion pieces by people who disagree" seems to be a large number of links used as 'proof' posted by many here . . . on both sides of an argument ;)
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