COVID-19 — Coronavirus

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Sounds more likely than it suddenly dropping from so high to so low.

it’s interesting for when we begin to ease the lock downs. No way could we have done a Sweden. The hospitals and deaths we have are evidence of that and that is with lockdown restrictions so we needed to prepare and ease it.

those countries who are planning to ease lockdown restrictions seem to be thinking a bout tailoring it to groups. So protecting still those that are vulnerable with isolation whilst the younger ones can perhaps have restrictions on them eased quicker so they can start to get on with their lives again,

the 17 number on its own is meaningless I agree but it’s number of deaths are not so wildly out of kilter with those who have imposed more draconian measures and perhaps evidences that so long as we protect vulnerable and elderly we can start to return to some normality in the coming weeks.
 
it’s interesting for when we begin to ease the lock downs. No way could we have done a Sweden. The hospitals and deaths we have are evidence of that and that is with lockdown restrictions so we needed to prepare and ease it.

those countries who are planning to ease lockdown restrictions seem to be thinking a bout tailoring it to groups. So protecting still those that are vulnerable with isolation whilst the younger ones can perhaps have restrictions on them eased quicker so they can start to get on with their lives again,

the 17 number on its own is meaningless I agree but it’s number of deaths are not so wildly out of kilter with those who have imposed more draconian measures and perhaps evidences that so long as we protect vulnerable and elderly we can start to return to some normality in the coming weeks.

Some people are permitted to go back to work in Spain tomorrow under pretty strict guidelines. Factories and construction sites are allowed to open but all commercial places remain closed and people still on lock down. Self-employed gardeners and pool cleaners etc are allowed to go to work.

I imagine this will be a test, not only in Spain but the rest of the world. The first sign of cases going up and we'll be back on immediate lock down I'm sure.
 
Some people are permitted to go back to work in Spain tomorrow under pretty strict guidelines. Factories and construction sites are allowed to open but all commercial places remain closed and people still on lock down. Self-employed gardeners and pool cleaners etc are allowed to go to work.

I imagine this will be a test, not only in Spain but the rest of the world. The first sign of cases going up and we'll be back on immediate lock down I'm sure.

Good luck Spain
 
The soaring ratings would most likely correlate with people feeling safe and a 'great, I'm okay!' attitude. Which is exactly what is wrong. False confidence.

why is that wrong? Do you want most people to feel scared and unsafe?? Surely the best thing for the country is for people not to panic . Most people are following the guidelines and trying their best, it’s impossible that everyone (idiots in the country) would though.

I understand what your saying and there probably should be more outrage, but I think people have become used to the situation and are just trying to carry on as normal/ the best they can
 
https://www.bbc.co.uk/news/uk-52255863

‘Coronavirus: Ethnic minorities 'are a third' of patients’

Cultural factors must be having an impact, e.g multi generational households.
Same thing seen in the USA. That's not cultural. That's poverty. Plus black and Asian people are more likely to work in the most exposed jobs. The poor always get hit hard in disasters and immigrant families are more likely to be poor.
 
What's the deal with that anti malaria drug they were harping on about!? Weren't there some HIV one too?

I'm sure someone wants to replicate and patent it while people keel over. God bless the big pharma
 
Same thing seen in the USA. That's not cultural. That's poverty. Plus black and Asian people are more likely to work in the most exposed jobs. The poor always get hit hard in disasters and immigrant families are more likely to be poor.


Yep and I wouldn't fancy being a blue collar American working without benefits or health insurance. No doubt it will spread through a family quicker because they can't afford to put themselves on a 2k bed per night
 
Same thing seen in the USA. That's not cultural. That's poverty. Plus black and Asian people are more likely to work in the most exposed jobs. The poor always get hit hard in disasters and immigrant families are more likely to be poor.

Plus an older generation of Asian and black clinicians have a very strong allegiance to the NHS, with examples of retired people returning to the front line and paying the ultimate price.
 
Talking of being warned and taking a risk, I read this morning that unlike for other viruses such as h1n1 type of flu viruses, for example, there were no vaccines at all for any kind of Coronavirus.

Why? Because since SARS had died down anyway and since the r&d was expensive and proving difficult, everyone just gave up and moved on to other things.
The key word there is "expensive".
 
Bill Gates is in my opinion one of the only people that has the experience, respect and vision to head up a global committee to give us all the best chance of coming out of this situation as quickly and safely as possible. Put him in charge of a global task force to get the best scientists, firms, tech firms and backed by all politicians from the G20, WHO and IMF.

1) Miles in front of the curve a always - Nations/politicians all plodding along behind the curve running multiple strategies which only fix the issue in specific regions. Understandable short term policy but a hopeless strategy for an end game.

2) Has invested fortunes in this area and was almost prophet like in his analysis of the dangers of a pandemic years ago, as usual people with this level of intellect and foresight are shunned due to our necessity to only fix issues once they are on our doorstep when it is far too late.

3) He has the respect of powerful leaders across the globe and carries significant credibility to unify a global policy due to his experience in the soft tech and infectious disease fields. He has no immediate drives in terms of political/financial persuasion.

4) He sincerely cares about making a positive difference for everyone and has the proven this over the last decade, one of the few people that has understood for a long time that the solution requires a global strategy. He is looking at this on a panoramic basis rather than a national/regional basis as he has the intelligence to realise that fixing issues in isolated areas around the world does not get us out of the medical and economic situation.

5) He already has solutions! To be fair he's been working on them for years before the virus even jumped to humans.

If this were to happen I would for the first time start to be very optimistic of our chances of defeating this and resuming to a semblance of normality by this time next year. I suspect global myopic nationalist policies will continue to hamper the arrival towards the end game solution we need.

 
A friend of my niece has just cycled 40 miles to have lunch with her.

Both have self isolaled before lockdown due to fever, cough etc.

Both recovered and presumably feel immune.

Cycling that far is surely against the rules.

This sort of attitude comes from the top.

Lots of recommendations. No laws.
They may have recovered they may be immune, nobody knows, but both are stupid. Maybe you should have a word with her.
 
A friend of my niece has just cycled 40 miles to have lunch with her.

Both have self isolaled before lockdown due to fever, cough etc.

Both recovered and presumably feel immune.

Cycling that far is surely against the rules.

This sort of attitude comes from the top.

Lots of recommendations. No laws.
The stats I saw this morning suggested Britain is second in terms of observing the social distancing guidelines behind Spain.
 
https://www.bbc.co.uk/news/uk-52255863

‘Coronavirus: Ethnic minorities 'are a third' of patients’

Cultural factors must be having an impact, e.g multi generational households.

Possibly but as a high number of UK cases are in London and a London hospital is used as an example in that report I would expect those numbers. Ethnic minorities well over 40% in London.

Over-representation of BME has been an issue in places outside of London.

With regards to the figures, definitely. It's a scare mongering headline where numbers are pretty much proportionately what should be expected, particularly in larger city environments.

Same thing seen in the USA. That's not cultural. That's poverty. Plus black and Asian people are more likely to work in the most exposed jobs. The poor always get hit hard in disasters and immigrant families are more likely to be poor.

The main reason in this case is population density. The higher the population density, the more likely you are to catch it. Between 30 and 40% of our nation's cities are ethnic minorities - even more so in densly populated city centres - so proportionally they will be hit harder.
The second reason is underlying medical conditions - especially diabetes (both type1 and type 2) and high blood pressure. This is why men are being hit proportionally harder as more of them have these conditions than women. Especially those over 60. Lifestyle and poverty come in here. High sugar diets are cheaper and this leads to people being overweight. Hence the poor and unfit will have proportionally more of these conditions.
The third reason is genetics. I'm afraid the Asian community will be hit the hardest here - twice as heavily as other communities in the same environments. Even healthy people in this community have a propensity for diabetes. Twice as much as any other ethnicity.
 
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