by windermereROYAL » 26 Mar 2020 19:14
by Snowball » 26 Mar 2020 19:20
windermereROYAL Why don`t people fecking listen? I`ve ventured out once in the last week, and that was only to do some shopping, but looking around it`s the `it can`t happen to me` ideology.
Get a grip you fecking melts, this is as serious as anything any of us will ever face in our entires lives.
by Emmer Green Royal » 26 Mar 2020 19:30
by andrew1957 » 26 Mar 2020 19:47
windermereROYAL Why don`t people fecking listen? I`ve ventured out once in the last week, and that was only to do some shopping, but looking around it`s the `it can`t happen to me` ideology.
Get a grip you fecking melts, this is as serious as anything any of us will ever face in our entires lives.
by Zip » 26 Mar 2020 19:54
andrew1957windermereROYAL Why don`t people fecking listen? I`ve ventured out once in the last week, and that was only to do some shopping, but looking around it`s the `it can`t happen to me` ideology.
Get a grip you fecking melts, this is as serious as anything any of us will ever face in our entires lives.
I think I find it a bit hard to get worked up about as I was told in May 2017 that I had 3-6 months to live from a serious cancer. I was offered a 7 hour life changing op and two months in hospital to recover which "might" give me some extra time. I decided against having this treatment and that I would live out what was left of my life as well as I could and die a natural death. However, I did take steps to improve my diet and took probiotic and vitamin C daily and the cancer slowly healed and went completely within 6 months. The NHS has no explanation. I never even took one day off work. I doubt anyone will believe me but I have all the letters from the oncologist to prove it.
Once you have faced and accepted your own death it puts everything into perspective and it has made me realise that people in the rich western countries have too great a sense of entitlement and unrealistic expectations about what the health services can achieve. Perhaps COVID-19 is a good thing as it will make us all face the possibility of our own mortality and perhaps rethink our priorities.
by SCIAG » 26 Mar 2020 19:59
John Madejski's Wallet Anyone care to place a bet that the actual death rate for the total population falls in the UK this year?
I think it will
by Snowball » 26 Mar 2020 20:28
Emmer Green RoyalSnowball https://www.worldometers.info/coronavirus/#countries
Coronavirus Cases:
494,695
Deaths:
22,290------------16%
Recovered:
119,785 ----------84%
CASES WHICH HAVE HAD AN OUTCOME 142,075
119,785 (84%) Recovered / Discharged
22,290 (16%) Deaths
Perhaps governments and journalists are deliberately not pointing at this awful stat.
I don't see how I can be mis-reading this, but I hope I am.
All coronvirus stats are very misleading because no-one has any idea how many cases there actually are. Most countries, including the UK, are doing very little testing.
Until you have tested a very large random sample (and not just people who turn up at hospital with a cough) you have no idea what the mortality rate really is.
According to the organisation European Monitoring of Excess Mortality for Public Health Action (who knew that such an organisation existed?) "Pooled estimates of all-cause mortality show normal expected levels of mortality in the participating countries." https://www.euromomo.eu
by Snowball » 26 Mar 2020 20:36
andrew1957windermereROYAL Why don`t people fecking listen? I`ve ventured out once in the last week, and that was only to do some shopping, but looking around it`s the `it can`t happen to me` ideology.
Get a grip you fecking melts, this is as serious as anything any of us will ever face in our entires lives.
I think I find it a bit hard to get worked up about as I was told in May 2017 that I had 3-6 months to live from a serious cancer. I was offered a 7 hour life changing op and two months in hospital to recover which "might" give me some extra time. I decided against having this treatment and that I would live out what was left of my life as well as I could and die a natural death. However, I did take steps to improve my diet and took probiotic and vitamin C daily and the cancer slowly healed and went completely within 6 months. The NHS has no explanation. I never even took one day off work. I doubt anyone will believe me but I have all the letters from the oncologist to prove it.
Once you have faced and accepted your own death it puts everything into perspective and it has made me realise that people in the rich western countries have too great a sense of entitlement and unrealistic expectations about what the health services can achieve. Perhaps COVID-19 is a good thing as it will make us all face the possibility of our own mortality and perhaps rethink our priorities.
by Snowball » 27 Mar 2020 08:16
by Snowball » 27 Mar 2020 08:39
by Hendo » 27 Mar 2020 09:12
Royals commit to 1,000 free tickets to for NHS workers when football resumes
#ReadingFC follow
@OfficialBHAFC's lead to become the first @EFL club to commit to the gesture started on the south coast...
by Uke » 27 Mar 2020 10:27
Hendo https://twitter.com/ReadingFC/status/1243462766058323968Royals commit to 1,000 free tickets to for NHS workers when football resumes
#ReadingFC follow
@OfficialBHAFC's lead to become the first @EFL club to commit to the gesture started on the south coast...
by Hendo » 27 Mar 2020 10:31
UkeHendo https://twitter.com/ReadingFC/status/1243462766058323968Royals commit to 1,000 free tickets to for NHS workers when football resumes
#ReadingFC follow
@OfficialBHAFC's lead to become the first @EFL club to commit to the gesture started on the south coast...
Great idea, but what about those who work in care homes as nurses and careers?
I’m sure they’ve will have done more hands on work than the appointments clerks at outpatients.
COVID-19 is going to go through care homes like a tsunami.
Nothing for them...
by Uke » 27 Mar 2020 10:44
HendoUke
Great idea, but what about those who work in care homes as nurses and careers?
I’m sure they’ve will have done more hands on work than the appointments clerks at outpatients.
COVID-19 is going to go through care homes like a tsunami.
Nothing for them...
Don't care homes come under NHS purview? Also it says that the details haven't been confirmed yet, so no need to get overly cynical, just yet
by muirinho » 27 Mar 2020 10:51
Snowball I've been slagging off China's figures but HUBEI's (Includes Wuhan) figures are not so outlying
Population 58,500,00
Cases = 67,801 (1,159 per million, a little less than Spain)
Deaths = 3,169 (54 per million, 3rd highest, Spain in 2nd is 93 pm)
Still serious 1,020. This is a huge percentage at 29.7% of active cases. Spain is worst outside China at 6.8% serious) Sounds like either somehow, people seriously ill are hanging on for 2-3 months (Yeah, right) or most of these are already dead and new-death figures are being trickled out for political reasons.
If the dead are really 4,000+ that would put China at 68 deaths per million (Italy 136, Spain 93, Switzerland 22)
by Snowball » 27 Mar 2020 10:53
muirinhoSnowball I've been slagging off China's figures but HUBEI's (Includes Wuhan) figures are not so outlying
Population 58,500,00
Cases = 67,801 (1,159 per million, a little less than Spain)
Deaths = 3,169 (54 per million, 3rd highest, Spain in 2nd is 93 pm)
Still serious 1,020. This is a huge percentage at 29.7% of active cases. Spain is worst outside China at 6.8% serious) Sounds like either somehow, people seriously ill are hanging on for 2-3 months (Yeah, right) or most of these are already dead and new-death figures are being trickled out for political reasons.
If the dead are really 4,000+ that would put China at 68 deaths per million (Italy 136, Spain 93, Switzerland 22)
From what I've read, if you go on to a ventilator, if you get better enough to come off it in under 7 days, you'll be ok, but any longer than that, and there's not much hope of any improvement. I saw some comments about patients being on a ventilator for 20-30 days. So maybe it almost becomes a question of whether they switch off the ventilator because they've given up on you and it's needed for another patient. Maybe if there isn't a shortage of ventilators, i.e., they have reduced the number of patients coming into ICU needing one, they'll leave you on it for a while longer.
So it could be a combination of letting death figures trickle out, and letting patients die more gradually.
by muirinho » 27 Mar 2020 10:54
UkeHendo https://twitter.com/ReadingFC/status/1243462766058323968Royals commit to 1,000 free tickets to for NHS workers when football resumes
#ReadingFC follow
@OfficialBHAFC's lead to become the first @EFL club to commit to the gesture started on the south coast...
Great idea, but what about those who work in care homes as nurses and careers?
I’m sure they’ve will have done more hands on work than the appointments clerks at outpatients.
COVID-19 is going to go through care homes like a tsunami.
Nothing for them...
by Snowball » 27 Mar 2020 10:56
Uke
Mrs Uke is a sister in a nursing care home 50 residents a third with dementia, and is shitting bricks about what is coming. These are long term patients so she knows them, their families etc.
It’s also staffed by more of those “unskilled” types who suddenly people seem to realise have actually kept our worlds going...
by Uke » 27 Mar 2020 10:58
SnowballUke
Mrs Uke is a sister in a nursing care home 50 residents a third with dementia, and is shitting bricks about what is coming. These are long term patients so she knows them, their families etc.
It’s also staffed by more of those “unskilled” types who suddenly people seem to realise have actually kept our worlds going...
Yes. I worry about the staff in supermarkets, Tesco etc. They are out there travelling to work, sitting at tills for 8-10 hours, meeting hundreds of people a day. tesco have been recruiting heavily because they have so man staff on 14-day quarantines
by Snowball » 27 Mar 2020 11:06
UkeSnowballUke
Mrs Uke is a sister in a nursing care home 50 residents a third with dementia, and is shitting bricks about what is coming. These are long term patients so she knows them, their families etc.
It’s also staffed by more of those “unskilled” types who suddenly people seem to realise have actually kept our worlds going...
Yes. I worry about the staff in supermarkets, Tesco etc. They are out there travelling to work, sitting at tills for 8-10 hours, meeting hundreds of people a day. tesco have been recruiting heavily because they have so man staff on 14-day quarantines
But haven’t got back to applicants either...
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