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Re: COVID19
Posted: Tue Oct 20, 2020 6:38 pm
by Stom
morepork wrote:Stom wrote:paddy no 11 wrote:Europe is going to post some big/bad numbers for november by the looks of it
Government has been scaring people here but deaths are still in line with the 5 year averages.
“Covid deaths” are up, but every single case is with someone who you’d expect to die, if not this year then next at least. Heart disease, alcoholism, diabetes caused by obesity are the biggest existing diseases on the fatalities.
All of those things are exacerbated by an overwhelmed health system. You may be able to cope with one wheezy fat drunken cunt a week all winter, but if you suddenly have 20 of them at once, shit gets interesting. For this reason, flu shots are being pushed hard here by most schools and large state employers. They are free, but you don't get a biscuit and a cuppa.
Sure, if your health service is stretched. But, as I said, deaths are in line with the 5 year average.
https://www.ksh.hu/docs/eng/xstadat/xst ... h004f.html
Edit: ok, deaths for the last available week were around 1-2% up but that’s within a normal threshold, especially when that equates to around 40 deaths.
However, the previous week was down around the same amount, so it’s pretty much the same.
Edit edit: I was looking at deaths for just 65+. When you add in the younger deaths, there are even fewer compared to previously as young people just aren’t dying.
Iirc, there have been 2 deaths under 45 recorded as COVID, both of whom were very ill. Can’t remember how.
Re: COVID19
Posted: Tue Oct 20, 2020 7:24 pm
by morepork
Do the government behead them and drive a stake through the heart to prevent them infecting the living?
Re: COVID19
Posted: Tue Oct 20, 2020 8:13 pm
by Digby
What's the Bobby with Covid in China? And why is it not seemingly a thing?
Re: COVID19
Posted: Tue Oct 20, 2020 8:39 pm
by Stom
morepork wrote:Do the government behead them and drive a stake through the heart to prevent them infecting the living?
Vlad Tepes wasn't even Transylvanian...he was Wallachian...
And honestly...I have no clue why the stats are so low here. I know of a few people who have caught it and we believe we had it quite near the beginning (we know someone who was in Northern Italy, she didn't tell us until months later, she never got ill), but we don't know anyone who has got seriously ill or been hospitalised.
In fact, over here it's pretty exclusively hit the old. There are few cases among the youth compared to the situations in other countries and while Hungarians aren't the type to flout rules (just moan about how terrible they are), they're not fully on board with everything.
Some measures have been done well by the government. The shop is fined if anyone is caught without a mask, so they all have security guards at the front door telling people to put masks on or they can't come in, which is a very good way of doing it.
But I don't know why cases and, particularly, deaths are so low...
Re: COVID19
Posted: Wed Oct 21, 2020 7:04 am
by Digby
I don't know if this counts as interesting or an aside, but I was listening earlier to a nurse describing some of the problems they're having in Argentina and amongst other details she mentioned nurses are not counted as healthcare professionals in Argentina, though they're still at this time expected to risk dying for the cause.
Re: COVID19
Posted: Fri Oct 30, 2020 10:26 am
by Which Tyler
Apologies if this has already been posted, but it's a must-read article on transmission mechanisms.
https://english.elpais.com/society/2020 ... e-air.html
Re: COVID19
Posted: Fri Oct 30, 2020 12:23 pm
by Digby
More importantly Which has rated my NEQI mask(s) as a Best Buy, it's about time we started getting some advice on what masks are actually useful and which are making to wrapping toilet paper around your head. Not sure we should have been waiting for a consumer advice group, the government should have moved quickly on this instead of awarding contracts for any old crap to their mates.
Re: COVID19
Posted: Fri Oct 30, 2020 2:00 pm
by Stom
Digby wrote:More importantly Which has rated my NEQI mask(s) as a Best Buy, it's about time we started getting some advice on what masks are actually useful and which are making to wrapping toilet paper around your head. Not sure we should have been waiting for a consumer advice group, the government should have moved quickly on this instead of awarding contracts for any old crap to their mates.
I thought that the general advice from the WHO was that masks pretty much help stop the spread from the infector but don't do much for you getting infected? So they're good to protect others, not yourself?
Some parents at my kids nursery complain that they need to wear masks inside the nursery, even the garden. They're insane.
Re: COVID19
Posted: Fri Oct 30, 2020 2:14 pm
by Digby
Stom wrote:Digby wrote:More importantly Which has rated my NEQI mask(s) as a Best Buy, it's about time we started getting some advice on what masks are actually useful and which are making to wrapping toilet paper around your head. Not sure we should have been waiting for a consumer advice group, the government should have moved quickly on this instead of awarding contracts for any old crap to their mates.
I thought that the general advice from the WHO was that masks pretty much help stop the spread from the infector but don't do much for you getting infected? So they're good to protect others, not yourself?
Some parents at my kids nursery complain that they need to wear masks inside the nursery, even the garden. They're insane.
There are 3 main things to consider for most of the reusable masks most of us are wearing, how many layers they're comprised of (and you can get a variance in tests of 7-99% effectiveness at stopping you breathing out disease onto others with masks typically have 1-3 layers of material in their assembly), the comfort (the less comfortable the more people will fiddle with and adjust or even not wear), and the material (things like cotton fare better especially after washing because the shrinkage isn't as bad)
And our governments should be doing a better job at establishing minimum standards than relying on the WHO saying just stick something over your face, and at communicating those minimum standards
How much they protect you as the wearer isn't known, those with Covid it can't help to reduce the exposure to viral load
The NEQI masks I have which are rated well by Which come from Boots (I think) or Ocado, and they're £15 for 3 if that's of interest to anyone. There was another mask they rated highly, I don't recall what that was.
Re: COVID19
Posted: Fri Oct 30, 2020 3:55 pm
by morepork
"How much they protect you as the wearer isn't known, those with Covid it can't help to reduce the exposure to viral load"
I don't quite understand this statement. Masks reduce the risk of the person wearing one from infecting others. They aren't meant to treat an infected individual. Viral load is a metric for how many virions are in an infected individual, an index of burden. If you mean masks may be ineffective against a exposure to a threshold quantity of virus, then yes, I suppose so, and there are in fact studies that show an inverse relationship between severeity of symptoms and viral load that point to mild/asymptomatic carriers having a greater risk of shedding. One important thing to factor in here is that physical barriers to transmission are multifactorial. Masks + distancing + sanitation + contact tracing definitely help prevent spread....just look at what is building up now after things reopened somewhat.
You raise a good point about information surrounding masks.The mode of transmission is aerosol, so anything that prevents droplets passing through will help. So will maintaining your distance from people. So will washing the mask regularly. Over here there is practically zero public service on the communication of up to date data to the public, so we have spastics with bandanas flapping around their chins and twats with their bulbous noses poking out
Re: COVID19
Posted: Fri Oct 30, 2020 5:31 pm
by Digby
morepork wrote:"How much they protect you as the wearer isn't known, those with Covid it can't help to reduce the exposure to viral load"
I don't quite understand this statement.
You don't understand simple and elegant gibberish?
I think it was probably supposed to say 'though with Covid it can't hurt to reduce the (possible) exposure to a higher viral load'. But I'm guessing.
I am though astonished at the lack of practical updates coming out of our government, about the best we've got is the slogan of 'hands, face, space, kick Domininc Cummings in the bollocks'. But by the time the PPE standards vary wildly, there's nothing being said about masks bar 'masks', that you might know what tier you were in yesterday but probably not today, that nobody seems to know the rules on what you're allowed to do as regards meeting others, being in a pub, going to other houses, bubbling... should be concerning Boris, Mat and Dom, and yet on they vacillate
Re: COVID19
Posted: Fri Oct 30, 2020 7:51 pm
by Sandydragon
morepork wrote:"How much they protect you as the wearer isn't known, those with Covid it can't help to reduce the exposure to viral load"
I don't quite understand this statement. Masks reduce the risk of the person wearing one from infecting others. They aren't meant to treat an infected individual. Viral load is a metric for how many virions are in an infected individual, an index of burden. If you mean masks may be ineffective against a exposure to a threshold quantity of virus, then yes, I suppose so, and there are in fact studies that show an inverse relationship between severeity of symptoms and viral load that point to mild/asymptomatic carriers having a greater risk of shedding. One important thing to factor in here is that physical barriers to transmission are multifactorial. Masks + distancing + sanitation + contact tracing definitely help prevent spread....just look at what is building up now after things reopened somewhat.
You raise a good point about information surrounding masks.The mode of transmission is aerosol, so anything that prevents droplets passing through will help. So will maintaining your distance from people. So will washing the mask regularly. Over here there is practically zero public service on the communication of up to date data to the public, so we have spastics with bandanas flapping around their chins and twats with their bulbous noses poking out
There was an absolute gem on the news here tonight. Middle Ages bloke who had just crossed from a very high risk area into a medium one to go to the betting shops and the pub, all of which are closed in his home town. And his mask was covering his mouth not his nose. I also suspect that he drove there and back whilst consuming alcohol.
And we wonder why infection rates are growing. The government isn’t doing a great job, but you can’t account for stupidity.
Re: COVID19
Posted: Fri Oct 30, 2020 7:56 pm
by morepork
Sandydragon wrote:morepork wrote:"How much they protect you as the wearer isn't known, those with Covid it can't help to reduce the exposure to viral load"
I don't quite understand this statement. Masks reduce the risk of the person wearing one from infecting others. They aren't meant to treat an infected individual. Viral load is a metric for how many virions are in an infected individual, an index of burden. If you mean masks may be ineffective against a exposure to a threshold quantity of virus, then yes, I suppose so, and there are in fact studies that show an inverse relationship between severeity of symptoms and viral load that point to mild/asymptomatic carriers having a greater risk of shedding. One important thing to factor in here is that physical barriers to transmission are multifactorial. Masks + distancing + sanitation + contact tracing definitely help prevent spread....just look at what is building up now after things reopened somewhat.
You raise a good point about information surrounding masks.The mode of transmission is aerosol, so anything that prevents droplets passing through will help. So will maintaining your distance from people. So will washing the mask regularly. Over here there is practically zero public service on the communication of up to date data to the public, so we have spastics with bandanas flapping around their chins and twats with their bulbous noses poking out
There was an absolute gem on the news here tonight. Middle Ages bloke who had just crossed from a very high risk area into a medium one to go to the betting shops and the pub, all of which are closed in his home town. And his mask was covering his mouth not his nose. I also suspect that he drove there and back whilst consuming alcohol.
And we wonder why infection rates are growing. The government isn’t doing a great job, but you can’t account for stupidity.
Which is precisely why you need a strong centralised response that is data driven and transparent.
Re: COVID19
Posted: Fri Oct 30, 2020 8:43 pm
by Which Tyler
Clarity and consistency help too.
Re: COVID19
Posted: Sat Oct 31, 2020 8:09 am
by Son of Mathonwy
Exactly. There are stupid and irresponsible Brits who are making things worse. But there are also, no doubt, stupid and irresponsible kiwis. The NZ government has a sensible, science driven strategy, it sets a good example, it's consistent and clear. The odd stupid person can't spoil it.
Re: COVID19
Posted: Sat Oct 31, 2020 8:15 am
by Digby
So Downing St. leaked they might be announcing closing the country on Monday, just in time for half-term to be over, but now today the Sun editorial says Covid isn't that bad so once more uncertainty has control with strong support from dithering. There is talk closing the country down would be for a month, so thank god we didn't close down earlier for less time, which is being kicked around the office as a good thing because they'd be able to say we're back open in time for Christmas, or so goes the spin.
Re: COVID19
Posted: Sat Oct 31, 2020 9:08 am
by Sandydragon
Son of Mathonwy wrote:Exactly. There are stupid and irresponsible Brits who are making things worse. But there are also, no doubt, stupid and irresponsible kiwis. The NZ government has a sensible, science driven strategy, it sets a good example, it's consistent and clear. The odd stupid person can't spoil it.
I quite agree that the messaging is awful, or at best confusing. But when you read comments like ‘covid isn’t that dangerous’ and ‘rules are there to be broken’ you realise that even if the messaging had been good, there are still gigantic twats out there who are too selfish for everyone’s good.
And without a national lockdown with common controls, the current situation is too difficult to police which makes the regulations effectively unenforceable.
Re: COVID19
Posted: Sat Oct 31, 2020 1:55 pm
by Sandydragon
Digby wrote:So Downing St. leaked they might be announcing closing the country on Monday, just in time for half-term to be over, but now today the Sun editorial says Covid isn't that bad so once more uncertainty has control with strong support from dithering. There is talk closing the country down would be for a month, so thank god we didn't close down earlier for less time, which is being kicked around the office as a good thing because they'd be able to say we're back open in time for Christmas, or so goes the spin.
Cue panic buying and other last minute frenzies which drive the police mad trying to enforce the rules currently in place.
Re: COVID19
Posted: Sat Oct 31, 2020 4:28 pm
by Son of Mathonwy
Sandydragon wrote:Son of Mathonwy wrote:Exactly. There are stupid and irresponsible Brits who are making things worse. But there are also, no doubt, stupid and irresponsible kiwis. The NZ government has a sensible, science driven strategy, it sets a good example, it's consistent and clear. The odd stupid person can't spoil it.
I quite agree that the messaging is awful, or at best confusing. But when you read comments like ‘covid isn’t that dangerous’ and ‘rules are there to be broken’ you realise that even if the messaging had been good, there are still gigantic twats out there who are too selfish for everyone’s good.
And without a national lockdown with common controls, the current situation is too difficult to police which makes the regulations effectively unenforceable.
If your messaging is clear and consistent (and consistently applied) it leaves purveyors of bullshit like the Sun with less freedom to undermine it. It also makes the police's job easier.
Re: COVID19
Posted: Sat Oct 31, 2020 8:03 pm
by Mikey Brown
Re: COVID19
Posted: Sat Oct 31, 2020 8:48 pm
by Which Tyler
Re: COVID19
Posted: Sat Oct 31, 2020 10:50 pm
by WaspInWales
Mikey Brown wrote:
Spot on!
Re: COVID19
Posted: Sat Oct 31, 2020 11:10 pm
by Digby
Sandydragon wrote:Digby wrote:So Downing St. leaked they might be announcing closing the country on Monday, just in time for half-term to be over, but now today the Sun editorial says Covid isn't that bad so once more uncertainty has control with strong support from dithering. There is talk closing the country down would be for a month, so thank god we didn't close down earlier for less time, which is being kicked around the office as a good thing because they'd be able to say we're back open in time for Christmas, or so goes the spin.
Cue panic buying and other last minute frenzies which drive the police mad trying to enforce the rules currently in place.
You may mock, but you try booking a Waitrose delivery slot, and there's seemingly been some celery supply issues.
Re: COVID19
Posted: Sun Nov 01, 2020 8:56 am
by Son of Mathonwy
Mikey Brown wrote:
Starmer's been calling for a lockdown since he first heard Sage had advised it , so he's obviously going to say it's the right thing to do. He will have a lot to complain about, however, mainly the inexcusable and disastrous delay.
Sage called for a circuit breaker on 21 September. 41 days have passed since then. The epidemic is said to be doubling in size every 8 days or so. That would imply that it's now 35 times bigger than it was on 21 Sept. That's 34 needless deaths for every death that we would have seen, had the government acted decisively. Even if the growth was less, say, very conservatively, 10 times greater, it means the vast majority of deaths are entirely due to the government's failure. It also means that whatever economically disastrous action that is taken will need to be sustained for a much longer period.
Re: COVID19
Posted: Sun Nov 01, 2020 7:53 pm
by Sandydragon
Son of Mathonwy wrote:Sandydragon wrote:Son of Mathonwy wrote:Exactly. There are stupid and irresponsible Brits who are making things worse. But there are also, no doubt, stupid and irresponsible kiwis. The NZ government has a sensible, science driven strategy, it sets a good example, it's consistent and clear. The odd stupid person can't spoil it.
I quite agree that the messaging is awful, or at best confusing. But when you read comments like ‘covid isn’t that dangerous’ and ‘rules are there to be broken’ you realise that even if the messaging had been good, there are still gigantic twats out there who are too selfish for everyone’s good.
And without a national lockdown with common controls, the current situation is too difficult to police which makes the regulations effectively unenforceable.
If your messaging is clear and consistent (and consistently applied) it leaves purveyors of bullshit like the Sun with less freedom to undermine it. It also makes the police's job easier.
Whilst I agree that the government has made a total hash of this, groups of people partying in public and private aren’t helping to contain the disease. The rule of six has been in place across England for a while yet there is plenty of evidence for that being ignored. There has to be some personal responsibility in all of this.