Good video about droplets
In Ireland they’ve been as consistent as possible, despite dealing with curveballs that are completely out of their control, such as global shortages of testing reagents and PPE. They’ve also been pretty clear and precise with their advice, based on the best available evidence at the time. Obviously, with hindsight, there were things they could have done differently but they’ve not done a bad job at all, based on the information and expert advice they had at the time.
Amazon stopped selling masks to the public. I don’t know how I’d get one if I had to wear one.
We've already had the discussion about masks quite a lot. No one disputes that they can be effective, but the issue is compliance (wearing them correctly, taking them off correctly, wearing the correct type etc) and also supply - there is a finite amount of resources. People can barely listen to instructions of staying indoors so can you imagine trying to get the public to wear masks properly. You are right it will have some effect even when worn incorrectly. The main concern however is most people will assume they are wearing them correctly, giving them a false sense of security and thereby possibly changing their behavioural habits. This may lead them to breaking isolation if they think it is okay when for some of those wearing it incorrectly, it is not.
The main focus must be to get these masks to keyworkers i.e. all people working in hospitals and all carers first, which also includes training. Other keyworkers can later be added such as supermarket staff, plumbers, electricians and whatever.
The video also has two glaring mistakes, which makes me question whether the authors know what they are talking about.
The positive is that countries that paid their people during the outbreak will be able to do over more quickly and will have few incidents of civil unrest and fewer deaths resulting from famine.Any positive economists on here?
7months from now, once the mortgage holidays and all the payment deferrals are done with, and banks And lenders start wanting that $ back, what’s the best case scenario for the state of the world then? My understanding is that some lenders are tagging payments on at the end of the term, but some will be asking for their money once the deferral period is up. At that stage, we will have the most people in history unable to pay their bills, what happens in that situation?
Need someone to explain how it won’t be as bad as my logical brain tells me it almost certainly will be.
Or, you know, they got the appropriate advice from the experts and acted on it accordingly.
One thing that backseat driver Twitter experts don’t get in all of this is that even the people who know considerably more about all of this than they do don’t always agree on everything. It easy to say the pubs should have closed on exactly this day, and schools on exactly this day and so on but those are huge decisions and getting a consensus from everyone involved won’t be easy. Which is further complicated by the day to day changes to scientific consensus, re the infectiousness and lethality of the virus. It’s why so many countries have so many different approaches, despite all of them being guided by legitimate experts who know infinitely more than paddy277575 on Twitter about how and when to introduce Non-Pharmaceutical Interventions in a pandemic.
I’ve been as critical of the UK and US approach as anyone but that’s because they’ve so obviously contradicted themselves with their dramatic changes in approach, as well as their shambolic mixed messages coming from their leader.
In Ireland they’ve been as consistent as possible, despite dealing with curveballs that are completely out of their control, such as global shortages of testing reagents and PPE. They’ve also been pretty clear and precise with their advice, based on the best available evidence at the time. Obviously, with hindsight, there were things they could have done differently but they’ve not done a bad job at all, based on the information and expert advice they had at the time.
Amazon stopped selling masks to the public. I don’t know how I’d get one if I had to wear one.
It would take a spectacularly fecking stupid deity to try and control over-population by creating a disease that was lethal for the elderly but leaves kids more or less untouched. Goes without saying that anyone who would take that theory seriously is just as stupid.
Watching the daily UK Govt/Medical briefing - as usual, Jonathan Van Tam (medical guy) comes across very well. And he called Peston out t'other day so he gets bonus points for that.We've already had the discussion about masks quite a lot. No one disputes that they can be effective, but the issue is compliance (wearing them correctly, taking them off correctly, wearing the correct type etc) and also supply - there is a finite amount of resources. People can barely listen to instructions of staying indoors so can you imagine trying to get the public to wear masks properly. You are right it will have some effect even when worn incorrectly. The main concern however is most people will assume they are wearing them correctly, giving them a false sense of security and thereby possibly changing their behavioural habits. This may lead them to breaking isolation if they think it is okay when for some of those wearing it incorrectly, it is not.
The main focus must be to get these masks to keyworkers i.e. all people working in hospitals and all carers first, which also includes training. Other keyworkers can later be added such as supermarket staff, plumbers, electricians and whatever.
The video also has two glaring mistakes, which makes me question whether the authors know what they are talking about.
I'm approaching week 3. I have zero interest in venturing out right now.Been indoors for almost two weeks, felt like just having a little walk outside and then I saw that video posted about droplets. Think i'll stay inside.
Been indoors for almost two weeks, felt like just having a little walk outside and then I saw that video posted about droplets. Think i'll stay inside.
They will cost a lot if you do find someone selling them.
I went into my local pharmacy today to get hand sanitizer. First bottle was 16 euro. Before this crisis the same bottle would have been four euro.
I ended up getting a smaller bottle for seven euro. That was still over priced.
I'm approaching week 3. I have zero interest in venturing out right now.
Hancock: We continue to search for antibody test
Matt Hancock is asked about promises of antibody tests that have yet to emerge - which will show if some has already had the virus.
On Thursday he admitted no working test had been found yet.
Today, Mr Hancock says the government has ordered 17 million, but says he has been "absolutely clear all along we will only use them if they work".
He says no G7 country has found a home antibody test that works yet, "but we continue to search for one".
Nah, I'm good. I've always wanted to become a recluse but couldn't afford to. Things are different now with all this furlough business.Should disperse easily outside, it's more in shops and homes with other people and other confined spaces.
Precisely, a virus does not want to kill the host. It will lose lethality over time. Figures being quoted suggest 10 million Infections worldwide, that puts it at 0.5 cfr.Agree.
The natural course of a virus is to survive as long as possible with a preferred route of becoming more infectious but less lethal. SARS was an exception. People seem to think it'll get both more infectious AND lethal, which is counter-intuitive in itself.
Nah, I'm good. I've always wanted to become a recluse but couldn't afford to. Things are different now with all this furlough business.
I can't tell you what the science is, that's my point, I'm not remotely qualified to argue it.
What I can say is that from various bits and pieces I've read it appears different measures have different impacts at different times, different measures react to other measures and different measures have their own negative secondary effects which have to be countered. Which means that in order to judge the best time to implement a given measure (neither too early nor too late to be its most effective) you have to judge it in relation to more factors than I could conveniently list. So when you ask "why not a week earlier", that's why. Or maybe it isn't. Neither of us are qualified to say or second guess, really. I'm not even in a position to judge how accurate those bits and pieces I read actually are. And even people who are qualified may well have differing opinions as that tends to be how science and medicine works.
What we can do though is compare it to the consensus approach of other countries and the recommendations of expert bodies like the WHO, which Ireland has been largely in line with throughout. Beyond that... *shrugs*
As for the north, there may well have been political mistakes in the government's approach. It's not exactly an easy political situation even at the best of times though and if we're looking to point fingers at someone for the divergence in response across the island, most would probably point to the UK government's initial decision to go in a rather atypical direction. The ROI government didn't create the back door that is NI, nor are they the primary government responsible for dictating the direction NI takes.
It's also worth pointing out that every single government will make mistakes, mistakes which will cost lives. They're all hopelessly overmatched and unprepared and trying their best in those circumstances. I don't think our mistakes thus far are particularly out of order or unreasonable relative to what's going on in the rest of the world.
Watching the daily UK Govt/Medical briefing - as usual, Jonathan Van Tam (medical guy) comes across very well. And he called Peston out t'other day so he gets bonus points for that.
One of the journalists has just asked if there are benefits to wearing a facemask.....
JVT says "a controversial area in 15 years he's been involved"... "on phone today to professor who works with WHO".... "there is no evidence that face masks help"... "The key is social distancing".... "It's frequent in some countries".... "We do not recommend wearing face masks in the UK"
Pretty clear view.
It's incredible that anyone trusts the figures CCP puts out.More people have died in the UK than China. Find that hard to believe personally.
I’ve just returned from a trip to Purley Tesco’s and it was one of the best shopping experiences I’ve ever had there!Thankfully I haven't come across any disturbance or abuse thrown at security guards regarding my shopping experiences during this lockdown but the ones out there that do are absolute selfish,ignorant cnut bags.
That's a very good point- loads of people must be struggling without their support groups. I guess we all need to be more tolerant.Hmmm, well yes, knobheads will be knobheads, but keep in mind some at least of the ones shouting at the supermarket staff may not be in great shape themselves. There are quite a few people around with "hidden" disabilities - ranging from the minor (that mean they can cope with routine, but not with the lack of it) to the major (that mean they often rely on others to help them maintain that routine, or to manage essential medication or addiction).
A lot of support systems, (particularly informal ones and voluntary services but also GP/public health driven things) are out of action, or not operating in the normal way. Care in the community can be a beautiful thing when it works, but it's also very fragile.
Zoom.
Total Staffed Beds in All U.S. Hospitals | 924,107 |
Staffed Beds in Community 1 Hospitals | 792,417 |
Intensive Care Beds 3 in Community Hospitals | |
Medical-Surgical Intensive Care 4 Beds in Community Hospitals | 55,663 |
Cardiac Intensive Care 5 Beds in Community Hospitals | 15,160 |
Neonatal Intensive Care 6 Beds in Community Hospitals | 22,721 |
Pediatric Intensive Care 7 Beds in Community Hospitals | 5,115 |
Burn Care 8 Beds in Community Hospitals | 1,198 |
Other Intensive Care 9 Beds in Community Hospitals | 7,419 |
Yep same! Share price doubled in two months, but has come back a bit on the security concerns.Genuine question but how did Zoom become so popular. I had never heard of even only two weeks ago???
I'm approaching week 3. I have zero interest in venturing out right now.
As I've been saying all along, face masks work, and finally the WHO is coming round to the most obvious fact.
https://www.abc.net.au/news/health/...-mask-use-general-public-coronavirus/12118042
Prices are a bit absurd. For N95, a box of 10 masks costs $75. Considering that they are meant to be used only once, it is really very expensive.Ebay
I've got no idea, just thought interesting (sic) as question asked as I saw topic on here.The appropriate face masks prevents inhalation of droplets. Apart from the dispersion aspects which I discussed above, the uncertainty from the biological point of view seems to be as best I can understand it (I have no knowledge of the biology and I am just reading the news) is that the scientists are not sure if a) you can become infected from inhaling the droplets and b) if (a) is true, how significant is it. The stance by JVT seems quite reasonable, at least in terms of the science.
But by saying "we don't recommend it" does risk alienating people because the alternative argument is that if there is a chance you become infected via inhalation of droplets containing the virus, then why not just give the masks anyway and not take the risk. This is not a view I personally hold entirely - I think we should be giving masks to the doctors/nurses/carers only, but others have a different view which is fair enough.
They definitely work to contain the virus when you are infected. The evidence they provide protection from the virus for someone who isn't infected is limited.
I think that the following tweet is important.
My wife is wearing a n95, goggles, a hair cover, gloves, a gown, and a plastic fasemask... and she's been trained on how to put them on and take them off to avoid contamination.As I've been saying all along, face masks work, and finally the WHO is coming round to the most obvious fact.
https://www.abc.net.au/news/health/...-mask-use-general-public-coronavirus/12118042
Prices are a bit absurd. For N95, a box of 10 masks costs $75. Considering that they are meant to be used only once, it is really very expensive.
I have no idea how much protection cheaper alternatives provide: https://ebay.to/2UCPYs6
So this may well mean that the UK is doing much better than we thought.