Because it pretty much died away and so did the funding and need.Heres a sobering thought. SARS was in 2003.........and they still dont have a vaccine
True, but it's also the case that it was proving difficult and not much progress had been made.Because it pretty died away and so did the funding and need.
This Edward Argar handling himself well under onslaught from Piers and Susannah, seems a pretty sharp guy.
Indeed it is. But South Korea did it.There was a German minister on Marr this morning saying for every 20,000 people it would require a team of at least five personal to carry out contact tracing. That's a huge undertaking to coordinate something to that degree.
Surely he's got to give Adam Boulton time to get his lip balm on.Boris doing a press conference soon
What do all 16,250 of them do for the rest of the time? One could go through two careers back to back and not be needed.Indeed it is. But South Korea did it.
We need such teams as Civil defence for the next virus to "escape" from China.
The press bulshit mantraObsessed about ending the lockdown so they can spend months complaining it was lifted too soon, deaths have risen, people are exposed etc. rather than another month of briefings, clapping and zoom concerts.
If we ignore Merseyside then we can reduce that number by around 275Interesting maths you’ve got there.
65m / 20,000 = 3,250 (x5) means 16,250 contact tracers.
They had created one but didn't trial it because the SARS outbreak was over.Heres a sobering thought. SARS was in 2003.........and they still dont have a vaccine
It would be like a branch of the Territorial Army. Regular practice and work furloughs paid for by the state.What do all 16,250 of them do for the rest of the time? One could go through two careers back to back and not be needed.
Then I’m in.It would be like a branch of the Territorial Army. Regular practice and work furloughs paid for by the state.
He's at his best when he looks like an old english sheepdog. BwahhhhhHe looks well to be fair although needs a haircut