Brwned
Have you ever been in love before?
- Joined
- Apr 18, 2008
- Messages
- 50,947
Are the issues caused by flaws inherent in the idea or through lack of administrative resources though? If it’s the latter, there are a lot of people who would love a job right now.
The administrative resources required to deal with the number of cases we have now would be so astronomical that no-one could ever agree to it, if the evidence for input vs. output was laid out plainly - whether that's this tight government or the general public.
Your link said that once we are over 1000+ cases per day, test and trace becomes ineffective. If we had managed test and trace effectively we would be in a much better position, when did it start, late May? When did we exceed 1000 cases per day? Early September, late August?
Maybe my annoyance with our failed test and trace not only costing lives, but also siphoning £12 billion to "friends of the governement" because they follow the privatisation ideology no matter the cost, meant was too dismissive of your post last month. If that is the case, I apologise. It is hard to look past the suffering that government mistakes and potential corruption are causing.
I don't think 1,000 was intended to be interpreted as the magic number, it's just a simple number for us to wrap our heads around. The unfortunate reality is that in every single month, we've had over 1,000 cases in a single day, and hovered around that for many days either side. The average case numbers haven't dropped below 500 a day in the entirety of the pandemic, and the current best estimates are we're still only catching 1 in 4 cases. If you multiply that 500 by the average number of contacts people have by the average time it takes to reach someone, you run into the inevitable problem that the amount of people you would need to do that job is far beyond what we can manage if that is the absolute best we can do, and the only reasonable expectation is that, without a lockdown, we'll consistently have substantially higher figures requiring multiples more people as it expands.
We point to Germany as a success story, and we know conclusively their test and trace system is much, much better and yet here they are on the edge of another lockdown. They're doing that so they don't have the same number of critical patients and ultimately deaths, and many of us here will agree with that approach, but it doesn't change the fact they're taking absolutely drastic economic measures just to manage that situation. If Germany, with many more qualified people, a much more efficient administrative system, a localised approach and a much better handle of virus transmission find themselves accepting contact tracing won't save us now, we need to take this more severe measures, then it's not a big leap to say that even without Serco, the contact tracing system would not have prevented us from being forced into taking these severe restrictions again.
That was my only point. I share your disgust with the way the system has been handled, and the shocking way they've handled the money here, but we can hold that view while also acknowledging that the test & trace system could not have been formed in a way that would have prevented the wider situation from unfolding. And at the very least, we can reasonably disagree on that issue without the suggestion that that viewpoint is only based on a misunderstanding of the issue at hand.