Tony Babangida
Full Member
- Joined
- May 15, 2017
- Messages
- 813
Well we got our easing! That first pint in the pub is going to be the best of my life!!
Well we got our easing! That first pint in the pub is going to be the best of my life!!
Italy had higher case numbers than the UK yesterday. The Government declared another emergency decree - the third in a fortnight. Bars and restaurants must close at 6pm, cinemas, concert halls, clubs and all that kind of thing closed, no public gatherings (there are usually a lot of festivals at this time of year), gyms and swimming pools closed and we are now strongly recommended to stay within our communes and not visit other people's homes - not mandatory at the moment. Restrictions on schools as well. We're getting back to how we were in the first wave.
I'm just about to leave the comune for my usual weekly shopping trip, to stock up on the things I can't get in the village or online. It may be my last chance I think, as I suspect we'll be seeing the police on the roads stopping us very soon.
I know we obviously have mass testing now across the continent and it is an incredibly interconnected continent.....but how on earth have we managed to get ourselves back in this situation? Pretty much all of us?
Did we relax too much after we'd controlled the first wave? Should all those holidays have been banned? Seems ridiculously silly now, especially considering I think most of East Asia/ SE Asia, which has far less movement between countries anyway, still seems relatively much more closed.
Vaccine or not, its pretty demoralising that we've ended up in a situation where many of us are going back into some kind of lockdown and the majority seem under at least some kind of measures.
In fairness, I think that the main issue here is a lack of a clear early message on what we can expect. I know that a lot of people thought that they need to stay home for a month or two and this would be over.
Regarding what you are saying, several posters here stated pretty clearly that we will have to go in and out of some kind of lockdown until a vaccine is found. Also, it was pretty common knowledge that the shit would hit the fan once autumn came.
In fairness, I think that the main issue here is a lack of a clear early message on what we can expect. I know that a lot of people thought that they need to stay home for a month or two and this would be over.
Regarding what you are saying, several posters here stated pretty clearly that we will have to go in and out of some kind of lockdown until a vaccine is found. Also, it was pretty common knowledge that the shit would hit the fan once autumn came.
You're looking at it from the German perspective, but in reality the UK is in a different world on this.
The major concern is about overloading the healthcare system past its breaking point. The UK has 4,500 ICU beds, Germany has 24,500 beds. Based on a study in Wuhan, about 5% of cases require ICU beds, so Germany has the capacity to manage 490,000 typical cases (50x what they currently have) while the UK has the capacity to manage 90,000 typical cases (a little over double what they currently have). On top of that the UK has a shortage of PPE and testing capacity, leading to many more doctors ill or self-isolating and reducing the peak demand they can manage. The UK had no alternative because the infrastructure in place was dramatically inferior to Germany.
We already have hospitals urging people not to go there because they have severe resource shortages. On lockdown. Surely everyone could see that would be happening on a much wider scale if not for the lockdown. It wouldn't simply have been a few old people losing a few months of their lives. It's the healthcare system that's at risk.
If we had 25,000 ICU beds then we would be able to cope without a lockdown, as per this graph on the top-left from Imperial's modelling. Instead, because the ICU capacity is 5x lower, even with the most risky approach to suppression we will need to be in intermittent lockdown for 6 of the next 18 months, 1 month on, 2 months off.
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Germany does have 25,000 ICU beds so they have more choice in that regard.
Its been a long few months but glad to reach double 0's.0 new cases reported in Victoria today. Been a long time coming. Still in lockdown, hoping for good news in the next couple of days.
Do you mean in the UK (or Serbia) or across Europe as a whole?
I think the problem of course is that many of us (and those in governments too) didn't know what to expect. In Europe, we slightly arrogantly saw it as an Asian virus I think that wouldn't hit us in Europe and even after we got control of the first wave (or avoided it in some cases in Central/East Europe), a lot of people seemed in pretty celebratory mood about how well they'd done to avoid it.
A lot of Europe seemed to treat their summer holidays as normal and people were flying all over the continent, while I see Singapore/HK/Japan/SK etc are still mostly in discussions about restarting business travel etc.
I feel like in Europe (and North America) we've kind of bit the bullet and said a second wave (or more ) is inevitable and almost shrugged our shoulders. Obviously still too early to say but it doesn't seem that East/SE Asia is really gong through something similar en masse like we are in Europe.
Do you mean in the UK (or Serbia) or across Europe as a whole?
I think the problem of course is that many of us (and those in governments too) didn't know what to expect. In Europe, we slightly arrogantly saw it as an Asian virus I think that wouldn't hit us in Europe and even after we got control of the first wave (or avoided it in some cases in Central/East Europe), a lot of people seemed in pretty celebratory mood about how well they'd done to avoid it.
A lot of Europe seemed to treat their summer holidays as normal and people were flying all over the continent, while I see Singapore/HK/Japan/SK etc are still mostly in discussions about restarting business travel etc.
I feel like in Europe (and North America) we've kind of bit the bullet and said a second wave (or more ) is inevitable and almost shrugged our shoulders. Obviously still too early to say but it doesn't seem that East/SE Asia is really gong through something similar en masse like we are in Europe.
Do you mean in the UK (or Serbia) or across Europe as a whole?
I think the problem of course is that many of us (and those in governments too) didn't know what to expect. In Europe, we slightly arrogantly saw it as an Asian virus I think that wouldn't hit us in Europe and even after we got control of the first wave (or avoided it in some cases in Central/East Europe), a lot of people seemed in pretty celebratory mood about how well they'd done to avoid it.
A lot of Europe seemed to treat their summer holidays as normal and people were flying all over the continent, while I see Singapore/HK/Japan/SK etc are still mostly in discussions about restarting business travel etc.
I feel like in Europe (and North America) we've kind of bit the bullet and said a second wave (or more ) is inevitable and almost shrugged our shoulders. Obviously still too early to say but it doesn't seem that East/SE Asia is really gong through something similar en masse like we are in Europe.
Good point, but I still believe that clear instruction and proper enforcement is the way to go. I think we got it under control as well as any European county could, bearing in mind that Italy was the first European country to have massive amounts of cases and deaths. There is a very clear lead here from the Government and that can be tweaked by regional presidents, as long as they are putting in additional measures and not relaxing the nation-wide ones.Does the fact that Italy has suffered worse before and is on course to suffer worse again make you wonder whether any of the issues that you had with the UK government's / citizen's approach to the pandemic were all that important? If the Italian government were doing all the right things and the UK government all the wrong things then doesn't that point to the lack of impact these things can realistically have?
Yeah sport has been keeping me going. Even got into horse racing. Desperate times!Its been a long few months but glad to reach double 0's.
Thank god for beer, sports and reading.
Does the fact that Italy has suffered worse before and is on course to suffer worse again make you wonder whether any of the issues that you had with the UK government's / citizen's approach to the pandemic were all that important? If the Italian government were doing all the right things and the UK government all the wrong things then doesn't that point to the lack of impact these things can realistically have?
i recently read somewhere that Covid has the 24th highest mortality rate in the UK? Why are we locking everything down over this? To me, it seems over-reactive.
i recently read somewhere that Covid has the 24th highest mortality rate in the UK? Why are we locking everything down over this? To me, it seems over-reactive.
i recently read somewhere that Covid has the 24th highest mortality rate in the UK? Why are we locking everything down over this? To me, it seems over-reactive.
So the improvement would be down to what exactly?? Learning how to treat the illness better?That was in August, when the Covid death rate in England was 7.2 per 100,000 people. The total death rate for all causes was 277 per 100,000, so yes, Covid was not that big a deal in August. In April however the Covid rate was 623 per 100,000, so over double all the other causes put together.
So the improvement would be down to what exactly?? Learning how to treat the illness better?
i recently read somewhere that Covid has the 24th highest mortality rate in the UK? Why are we locking everything down over this? To me, it seems over-reactive.
Good point, but I still believe that clear instruction and proper enforcement is the way to go. I think we got it under control as well as any European county could, bearing in mind that Italy was the first European country to have massive amounts of cases and deaths. There is a very clear lead here from the Government and that can be tweaked by regional presidents, as long as they are putting in additional measures and not relaxing the nation-wide ones.
I think there's now a misconception that it's generally worse here than the UK. I would dispute that, as many regions have reasonably low numbers of cases and deaths, although a couple in particular have serious problems (Lombardy and Campania). When we were in the UK through September, people were reacting with horror when I said we live in Italy. At the time, cases were very low here and things were under control. When I told people what was actually happening, they were surprised and somewhat dubious.
The measures must have worked originally, because we were all down to very low numbers of new cases for quite a long time. When we relaxed them (coinciding with very good weather here and the holiday season), things started to go the other way again. The UK could have moved more decisively and at an earlier stage, which I believe would have resulted in better first wave outcomes for the UK. Johnson had the benefit of not being first, he didn't make the best use of it.
The initial response in Italy was definitely better. Italy went from being worst in Europe to amongst the best, whereas the UK never really got a handle on it.
The second wave is yet to be seen. I see there is more negative press in Italy this time around and the natural Italian tendency to ignore rules a little more pronounced, but i was in the UK two weeks ago and there are clearly plenty of problems there too. Yesterday was the first day in months where Italy posted more cases than the UK. It's too early to tell how either country will handle the second wave.
Aside from that, everything the Italian government is doing now is skirting around the real issue, schools and universities. Cases only started to shoot up once the kids went back in mid September. Schools are getting closed down all over the place as authorities try to keep up. The 11pm curfew is aimed at stopping kids hanging around in town squares at night. The sport ban is aimed at them playing football together. But nobody will say it. Just my opinion of course.
i recently read somewhere that Covid has the 24th highest mortality rate in the UK? Why are we locking everything down over this? To me, it seems over-reactive.
If this is true, my guess its because contrary to the "top 23" other reasons people die, Covid is infectious.i recently read somewhere that Covid has the 24th highest mortality rate in the UK? Why are we locking everything down over this? To me, it seems over-reactive.
Interesting. Generally agreed!
Man, those statements are designed to get you to have precisely that reaction. Why jump into their trap? Here's a more considered analysis of the data.
Between March and May there were over 96,000 deaths from non-covid factors and over 33,000 from covid. Anything that makes up 1/4 of our death total is a huge issue that requires urgent attention. That's while doing an enormous amount to prevent covid from transmitting - if we didn't do anything, it's very reasonable to expect more people would have died from covid than all other sources combined.
What you want to compare is covid vs. preventable deaths. Something like influenza, for example, rather than dementia and alzheimer's. We can prevent people from dying from influenza by reducing the transmission and providing timely medication, and because that's a very achievable goal, it's something we should expect to do. That isn't the case for dementia and alzheimer's, unfortunately. And while we know how to limit cardiovascular deaths, we can't have the same instant impact, they require long-term behavioural change which we have invested much more in over the course of their history than we have in tackling this particular virus. That long-term behavioural change is just harder, and less effective.
There is nothing comparable to this, that kills as many people (or makes them seriously ill) which is preventable with known strategies. There is no plausible reality where we would have let things just go on as normal with that present, when it comes with the double whammy of exponential growth. Which is why literally no country in the world has done that. No amount of selective analysis of the numbers will ever dispute that fundamental reality.
This image sums it up perfectly for me in terms of the perceived society priorities in Wales:
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By what metric has Italy suffered worse than UK?Does the fact that Italy has suffered worse before and is on course to suffer worse again make you wonder whether any of the issues that you had with the UK government's / citizen's approach to the pandemic were all that important? If the Italian government were doing all the right things and the UK government all the wrong things then doesn't that point to the lack of impact these things can realistically have?
By what metric has Italy suffered worse than UK?
Wow - this is a statistic that i have never seen and shows the lockdowns etc as being a necessity at minimum.
That criticism of UK is warranted even if you seem to be driven to argue (not prove) differently? A bit odd response from you. And it was a genuine question, because I couldn't think of one.is there a deeper point to quibbling over the numbers?
i recently read somewhere that Covid has the 24th highest mortality rate in the UK? Why are we locking everything down over this? To me, it seems over-reactive.
Tesco bans sales of sanitary products after branding them as 'non-essential' under Welsh firebreak rules
https://www.standard.co.uk/news/uk/...ts-nonessential-wales-firebreak-a4572964.html
Tesco bans sales of sanitary products after branding them as 'non-essential' under Welsh firebreak rules
https://www.standard.co.uk/news/uk/...ts-nonessential-wales-firebreak-a4572964.html
Disgraceful.
That criticism of UK is warranted even if you seem to be driven to argue (not prove) differently? A bit odd response from you. And it was a genuine question, because I couldn't think of one.