So Gove said that increased testing for this is being held up by a lack of the required chemical reagents.
Chemical manufacturers have gone "Erm, there's no shortage that we're aware of."
Excellent.
There are currently 15 000 crewman aboard 18 cruise ships off the coast of Australia.
Even Jacinda wont accept a single cruise ship. I guess now is the best possible time to have a Minister for Facism to sort this mess out.
https://www.theguardian.com/australi...stralias-coast
Last edited by Queenslander; 01-04-2020 at 09:49 AM.
https://www.google.com/amp/s/busines...cco-leaves/amp
Pretty sick to carry out April Fools in this climate.
What Robert Peston said about 'the chemical industry' providing the stuff is balls. He might as well have been quoting ice cream men. Another one for these journalists and their methods being shown right up by all this (and he hasn't corrected it as twenty thousand people have shared it and convinced themselves of it).
I don't understand why all 'political journalists' haven't been furloughed. Newsnight went deep on our lack of testing last night, but heading up the following to the opener was their political editor. I mean, why? Just get John Campbell on via Skype from his spare bedroom.
And also, what the fuck is this tool doing driving round the Schengen area bothering border staff?
https://www.bbc.co.uk/news/av/world-...back-to-europe
Some people get no symptoms at all. Some get a nasty cough and feel flu-y. Some feel breathless, but cope fine at home. Some need a bit of oxygen. Some need a lot of oxygen. Some need ventilating. And everything in-between. Most people don't need a ventilator, but the numbers of cases are large enough that even that small percentage who do will likely overwhelm our capacity at some point.
I know you're not a doctor but you obviously don't go from fine to needing a ventilator in a few seconds. Nobody would be surviving if that were the case.
Yeah, well, you're no Wifi Soutions Sales Officer.
Typical smarminess from the resident GP. I never suggested it was a few seconds. I have just read a few articles where people went from 'fine' to 'ventilation' within hours. I didn't know if oxygen was a step in between or not, or at which point standard oxygen isn't enough.
Peston is on LBC now and he hasn't a clue.
I asked you if you thought one breath they were fine and the next they couldn't breathe and you replied "isn't that exactly the case"...
But anyway. Yes some people are deteriorating very quickly (hours) to the point of needing ventilation. Most aren't. Most who need a ventilator will have been on oxygen for a while first. Some will need oxygen but never need a ventilator.
https://www.cdc.gov/mmwr/volumes/69/...cid=mm6913e2_w
Get [back] on the tabs lads.
http://covid19.healthdata.org/
Here's some graphs and projections for the US. It's ... all over the place.
This is a decent timeline of the 'herd immunity' stuff that counters the bullshit NARRATIVE that has taken hold. But then he's probably the best historian in the country, and he's actually read the documents, so I suppose it would differ from what the knobheads are putting out.
The gist of the strategy in the first four days was "we're going to suppress the peak, but we're not actually going to do anything to suppress that peak yet". You can argue whether this is worth the effort and the longer term pain (I don't happen to agree that it isn't at this stage) but the government clearly changed tack far quicker than they were planning to.
It's an attempt to counter the NARRATIVE that the original plan was based largely around us all getting it and doing not a lot about it, which is a) wrong; and b) obscures the actual issues that they faced (including those that led to them having to speed things up).
Given how little we're testing, it makes me wonder if we've still got one eye on that. Hoard a load of tests until the end of next month and then go nuts to see how much of the country has/had it. Or we could just be shite at battling other nations in the testing market.
By "issues that they faced", do you mean realising that more people would die (a lot more) if they carried on down the route they were planning to at the planned pace?
I agree though that I don't think the plan was ever to do nothing, and anyone that thinks that wasn't paying attention.
Approval ratings for the government are off the charts high. The public know the score.
When is the next GE in the UK?
I think we've got another four years yet. Whenever May pulled that fast one that blew up in her face.
Didn't they get rid of the fixed term parliament act?
Is that 600? OYFT.
It's a good job we can't have an election with that brilliant 'plan' Jeremy Corbyn has outlined doing the rounds. It shows the government right up.
And we should have locked shit down sooner, as I and others were saying at the time. Today's death toll (if we're now at that level or more for a while) is testament to that.
For context, Italy hit 600 hundred+ deaths on the 20th March, prior to that they hadn't topped 500.
Appreciate this isn't an exact science, but we're also not counting deaths outside hospitals it seems.
https://www.gov.uk/government/groups...id-19-response
All that stuff, some of which (like this) deals with the political and practical difficulties of telling people to stay inside at a time when barely anyone here was dying from it.
And one more, and then I'll stop. The government aren't handling this well. While some aspects have been genuinely impressive (Nightingale jumps to mind immediately), our testing is a farce. And without that we've no hope of getting back to proper normality until a vaccine comes along.
I don’t think many places have been. Deaths will go up for ages yet, though the growth rate will start to slow. Cases probably for another week or two before we see them stabilise and drop.
Get the border shut and we’ll have football in Scotland back by mid-May
No idea on testing capacity. The boffins know what the growth rate is as they see the growth of hospital admissions pretty much in real time. Hospital admissions are a very good indicator.
The next few weeks are going to be bad. We’ve been told that by mid-April we expect to have more Covid-19 patients than we currently have beds across our five sites. We should expect to see national deaths bounce around the high hundreds from later this week and for that to continue for another 2-3 weeks.
We are very likely to see case numbers stabilise then drop after Easter week. The government will then need to consider how quickly they open stuff up. My guess is that they won’t do so until they know they can test widely enough to shut down specific sectors or locations when the need arises.
The really shit thing is that we can see how bad it’s about to get. The good thing is that we can see in Lombardy (and will soon see across Italy) that the worst will pass.
90+% of deaths seem to be the infirm. Beside the point of discontent focused within one group of society as opposed to spread across everyone, they really should have just quarantined those at risk and let the rest of us out to play. That way they could palm the deaths off on individual responsibility, too.
I reckon if they had the data they do now, they would have in many places, to be honest (at least in countries with enough records to know the age of everyone and where they are).
I think basically a bunch of miscalculations have been made very early on that has made it a little too late for everyone everywhere to take any proper actions.
But then also:
https://www.nytimes.com/2020/03/31/h..._Bes2R3GZSSrPE
It just seems more and more like a bunch of people are just walking around spreading this in society without having a clue they are. So you would have had to A) Quarantine all old people and risk groups and then B) make sure EVERYONE who ever gets to see them (bringing food etc) are all tested like...daily?
It appears to have killed April Fools as a concept which I'm glad for.
I have just taken notice to Finlands prime minister. Wish she was ours.