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Main Coronavirus / Covid-19 Discussion Thread







Thunder Bolt

Silly old bat
I'd actually assumed it was his Mrs he was referring to, but either way I was certainly not taking the piss out of someone from his family, I was simply joking (lightheartedly I might add) about the fact he used their first name as if we were meant to know who he meant.

His daughter used to post on Nsc regularly herself. He has referred to her by her real name many times, but you probably hadn’t noticed in the past.
People are worried sick so more likely to react.
 






atomised

Well-known member
Mar 21, 2013
5,124
His daughter used to post on Nsc regularly herself. He has referred to her by her real name many times, but you probably hadn’t noticed in the past.
People are worried sick so more likely to react.

Thanks for the clarification. I imagine it has passed me by previously
 




murciagull

Active member
Nov 27, 2006
878
Murcia
Just a question, if you have had Covid-19 and recovered and have built up some immunity can you still spread the virus even if it doesnt effect you?
 


RossyG

Well-known member
Dec 20, 2014
2,630
Just a question, if you have had Covid-19 and recovered and have built up some immunity can you still spread the virus even if it doesnt effect you?

As I understand it, only for the usual few days. After that, no.
 


murciagull

Active member
Nov 27, 2006
878
Murcia
So presumably anyone in that situation would still have to observe the lockdown as their ability to spread the virus would be the same.
 




Blue Valkyrie

Not seen such Bravery!
Sep 1, 2012
32,165
Valhalla
Just a question, if you have had Covid-19 and recovered and have built up some immunity can you still spread the virus even if it doesnt effect you?
No.... but if it mutates can you get it again ?

We all hope immunity draws a line under this, but I don't believe science at this point can confirm that for sure.
 


Mellotron

I've asked for soup
Jul 2, 2008
31,973
Brighton
So presumably anyone in that situation would still have to observe the lockdown as their ability to spread the virus would be the same.

You’d think anyone who tests positive for immunity would still have to serve 7 days isolation/social distancing and then could be back out in society, perhaps? This is looking ahead a few weeks at the least, of course.
 


RossyG

Well-known member
Dec 20, 2014
2,630
So presumably anyone in that situation would still have to observe the lockdown as their ability to spread the virus would be the same.

Using Matt Hancock as an example, I believe that he could go anywhere without transmitting the disease. Unless someone breathed germs on his clothing and he passed it on that way.

This will be an issue soon. People who have had it and recovered will want to start going out again.
 




ManOfSussex

We wunt be druv
Apr 11, 2016
14,780
Rape of Hastings, Sussex
So presumably anyone in that situation would still have to observe the lockdown as their ability to spread the virus would be the same.

The last day at work before the office shut - Monday 23/03 - a colleague came back in after 7 days self isolating. He still looked and felt a bit rough and still had a cough, but as he didn't have a high temperature he was apparently fine under the guidelines here. He also doesn't know for sure what he was self isolating for, as he wasn't tested. No social distancing went on in the office that day. I know that a girl that was around him got ill, but that could have been from elsewhere obviously and I haven't felt ill in the last 2 and a bit weeks, though I could be asymptomatic, but it did strike me at the time as being a bit odd that he was allowed back to work.

Frankly, what do I know though - it's not as if I'm The Chief Medical Officer for Scotland, or something.......
 




Hugo Rune

Well-known member
NSC Patron
Feb 23, 2012
21,988
Brighton
Main Coronavirus / Covid-19 Dicsussion Thread


Editor’s note:
The Financial Times is making key coronavirus coverage free to read to help everyone stay informed.*Find the latest here.

Germany’s virus response shines unforgiving light on Britain.

Johnson’s shifting strategy has left UK behind on testing, critical care beds and ventilators.

Even through this dark month of unimaginable shocks, one thing is still guaranteed to make British ministers and officials bristle: mentioning the Germans. “Arrgh,” sighed one senior adviser, stung by unflattering comparisons.

With the pandemic bearing down, Boris Johnson on March 17 called on Britain’s captains of industry to start building ventilators to supplement the country’s stock of 8,000, lightheartedly dubbing the scheme “Operation Last Gasp”.*

But almost a week before the prime minister spoke, Germany had ordered 10,000 from an established manufacturer, adding to its existing 20,000 machines. This week Germany had more than twice as many critical care beds vacant — around 15,000 to 20,000 — as England has in its system overall.

Even more stark is relative performance on testing. The UK and Germany entered the crisis in lock-step, working together on virus tests, some of the first developed in the world. But Germany’s labs ran at more than five-times the NHS rate, completing 918,460 tests versus Britain’s 163,194.*

Only on Thursday did Matt Hancock, the health secretary, declare Britain would “ramp up” efforts by harnessing private facilities — just as the global supply of chemicals and testing equipment was being squeezed. “Germany had 100 test labs at the start, largely thanks to Roche, but we had to start from a lower base,” he said. “We are going to build a British diagnostics industry at scale.”

Experts say it is too early to judge how different policy choices have affected countries during this global pandemic. Germany’s advantages stem from decades of higher health spending, alongside an industrial base better able to scale-up for an emergency. Even with this head-start, German ministers admit they are in “the calm before the storm”; in terms of deaths, the country is on a similar coronavirus trajectory to the UK.

But Berlin’s strategy has nevertheless held up an unforgiving mirror to Britain’s government. This is not just with regard to NHS capacity — tuned more for resource efficiency than resilience — but the quality and pace of decision making. The charge: that Britain’s strategy twisted and turned, squandering precious time.*

“It just wasn't consistent. They tested various strategies and rejected them,” said Martin Stuermer, a virologist at IMD Labor in Frankfurt. “They had this plan to allow life to go on but ensure that elderly people were protected. But then they abandoned that. And they weren't prepared for mass testing. but the main problem was that the government just didn't chart a clear course in this crisis — unlike the German government.”

The implications may soon become terrifyingly clear. UK infections are expected to peak by Easter Sunday.

Mr Johnson was slow to grip the coronavirus crisis. Evidence coming out of China about the disease in February was deemed unreliable and there was a hope it would burn itself out, like Sars in 2003.

Although Whitehall had started working up contingency plans from the start of 2020, the lack of urgency was summed up by Mr Johnson’s decision to disappear for a week in late February to his grace-and-favour Chevening home. It was only on March 2 that he chaired his first coronavirus emergency meeting.

At this point advisers were envisaging a spread of the virus through Britain — controlled by escalating social distancing measures — with a peak around mid-May to early-June. “Glastonbury should be all right,” one minister told anxious colleagues, referring to the world’s biggest music festival in late June.

Rather than following countries like South Korea in taking immediate draconian action to stop the disease — including the use of mass testing — Mr Johnson’s team thought a more modulated approach would ultimately save more lives and cause less economic harm.*

Patrick Vallance, the UK’s chief scientific adviser, found a willing ally in Dominic Cummings, Mr Johnson’s chief adviser, in embracing the concept of “herd immunity”, where the disease passed through healthy members of the population. Mr Cummings referred to the concept in a 2013 blog.

“There was an element of British exceptionalism to it,” said one Treasury official.*

Crucially during this time, Public Health England, a government agency, also advised that mass-testing was not feasible. Neil Ferguson, a professor at Imperial College and government adviser, told parliament it was “very clear from messages from PHE that we would have nowhere near enough testing capacity to adopt that strategy”.

Unlike Germany’s decentralised and at times unwieldy system, the UK chose to concentrate efforts in superlabs, in part to ensure reliability. Sharon Peacock of PHE said it was preferable to “dissipating our efforts into a lot of laboratories”. One senior academic said PHE struggled to delegate one of its core functions; the service had been “hanging around waiting for the next epidemic. That is what they are paid to do,” he said.

But in practice it meant that while Germany broadened its testing strategy to cover all those with mild symptoms — the core of a strategy to test, trace and isolate people infected with the virus — by March, Britain was struggling to scale up. The approach was narrowed to testing only hospital admissions. Only 5,000 of approx 500,000 frontline NHS workers had been tested by Thursday.*

Donald Trump was to say later that if Britain had persisted with the herd immunity approach it would have been “catastrophic”. But that had already become clear to Mr Johnson and his team by the weekend of March 14-15.

New data from Italy confirmed the disease was spreading faster than previously thought, with more patients ending up in intensive care units: Imperial College warned about 250,000 people would have died in the UK without a change of course. Worse still, ministers were advised that even if NHS intensive care capacity was doubled or trebled, it would be overwhelmed three times over.

Mr Hancock, Michael Gove, cabinet office minister, and Mr Cummings now urged Mr Johnson to put aside his libertarian instincts and effectively lock down Britain. “The three of them saw it immediately,” said one Number 10 official. Another official involved in the strategy change said: “When the facts change, you change your mind.”

Restrictions on social life lagged behind some of Germany’s states by a week or so, but the differences with Britain were less pronounced than with some other countries.

More consequential for Britain was the gaping flaw the strategy change exposed in Britain’s preparations. The only exit strategies from the lockdown appeared to be a vaccine or antiviral treatments — still thought to be many months away — or mass community testing to allow restrictions to be eased without triggering a second wave.*

“If you follow a herd immunity strategy, why would you not build treatment and testing capacity? That’s what puzzles me,” asked Devi Sridhar, professor of global health at Edinburgh University. “I think it is because they were taking everything from the flu playbook. In flu you don’t have to chase every case down, you don’t test in the community or medical staff . . . But coronavirus is not flu.”*

To expand treatment, Britain has already doubled its critical care bed capacity this month and aims to acquire up to 50,000 ventilators in total. Some 30 are due to arrive this weekend but 8,000 are expected in the next few weeks. But time is very short. Since the beginning of the outbreak Germany has amassed 10,000.*

Mr Johnson appealed to household names such as Airbus, Nissan, Dyson and McLaren to aid the effort. But some established medical equipment makers felt left in the cold. “They’ve overlooked the real manufacturers in the system,” said one person at a medical devices maker who asked not to be named. Ministers insist they have pursued all avenues, engaging with industry since February.

Blame over testing mis-steps is being directed by ministers at the NHS bureaucracy and PHE. “They’re proud of their independence and won’t yield for anyone,” said one minister of health officials. “The same is true for Public Health England: they’re the reason we don’t have more testing. They want to control the whole tedious process.”

For doctors a long way downstream from the decisions in Whitehall, the impression has overwhelmingly been one of dithering and delay caused by theoreticians being left to manage an emergency.*

“To us on the frontline, it feels like this is what happens when you let epidemiologists in charge of the real world,” said an NHS consultant from Hertfordshire on the Covid frontline. “What has never been explained to those working in respiratory care is why there wasn't 'test, test, test', then isolate, contact and trace again, which is the absolute basis of public health and infection control. Now they seem to have reacted, but it's all too late.”
 




Green Cross Code Man

Wunt be druv
Mar 30, 2006
19,906
Eastbourne
The last day at work before the office shut - Monday 23/03 - a colleague came back in after 7 days self isolating. He still looked and felt a bit rough and still had a cough, but as he didn't have a high temperature he was apparently fine under the guidelines here. He also doesn't know for sure what he was self isolating for, as he wasn't tested. No social distancing went on in the office that day. I know that a girl that was around him got ill, but that could have been from elsewhere obviously and I haven't felt ill in the last 2 and a bit weeks, though I could be asymptomatic, but it did strike me at the time as being a bit odd that he was allowed back to work.

Frankly, what do I know though - it's not as if I'm The Chief Medical Officer for Scotland, or something.......

I phoned my GP about the cough as I had it 7 days after self-isolating. He assured me that was okay and the virus was no longer transmittable (assuming it was covid). This is backed up on the NHS website: Screenshot 2020-04-07 at 11.48.03.png
 


pb21

Well-known member
Apr 23, 2010
6,380
So a Gove family member gets symptoms of Covid-19 and therefore Gove needs to self isolate for 14 days. This is even though its reasonably likely that the family member caught it (if they do have it) off Gove, who had it asymptotically (who caught it off Johnson/Hancock/Cummings/Whitty).

We really need to get these antibody tests sorted.
 


Garry Nelson's teacher

Well-known member
May 11, 2015
5,257
Bloody Worthing!
Saw something today which made me smile. Walking through Goring I went past a place that writes Wills. There was a big notice outside thanking the NHS staff for their efforts to save lives. While I don't doubt the sincerity of their messaging, I did just wonder for a second if this particular company really wanted the NHS to be totally successful.
 


Bakero

Languidly clinical
Oct 9, 2010
13,895
Almería
Editor’s note:
The Financial Times is making key coronavirus coverage free to read to help everyone stay informed.*Find the latest here.

Germany’s virus response shines unforgiving light on Britain.

Johnson’s shifting strategy has left UK behind on testing, critical care beds and ventilators.

Even through this dark month of unimaginable shocks, one thing is still guaranteed to make British ministers and officials bristle: mentioning the Germans. “Arrgh,” sighed one senior adviser, stung by unflattering comparisons.

With the pandemic bearing down, Boris Johnson on March 17 called on Britain’s captains of industry to start building ventilators to supplement the country’s stock of 8,000, lightheartedly dubbing the scheme “Operation Last Gasp”.*

But almost a week before the prime minister spoke, Germany had ordered 10,000 from an established manufacturer, adding to its existing 20,000 machines. This week Germany had more than twice as many critical care beds vacant — around 15,000 to 20,000 — as England has in its system overall.

Even more stark is relative performance on testing. The UK and Germany entered the crisis in lock-step, working together on virus tests, some of the first developed in the world. But Germany’s labs ran at more than five-times the NHS rate, completing 918,460 tests versus Britain’s 163,194.*

Only on Thursday did Matt Hancock, the health secretary, declare Britain would “ramp up” efforts by harnessing private facilities — just as the global supply of chemicals and testing equipment was being squeezed. “Germany had 100 test labs at the start, largely thanks to Roche, but we had to start from a lower base,” he said. “We are going to build a British diagnostics industry at scale.”

Experts say it is too early to judge how different policy choices have affected countries during this global pandemic. Germany’s advantages stem from decades of higher health spending, alongside an industrial base better able to scale-up for an emergency. Even with this head-start, German ministers admit they are in “the calm before the storm”; in terms of deaths, the country is on a similar coronavirus trajectory to the UK.

But Berlin’s strategy has nevertheless held up an unforgiving mirror to Britain’s government. This is not just with regard to NHS capacity — tuned more for resource efficiency than resilience — but the quality and pace of decision making. The charge: that Britain’s strategy twisted and turned, squandering precious time.*

“It just wasn't consistent. They tested various strategies and rejected them,” said Martin Stuermer, a virologist at IMD Labor in Frankfurt. “They had this plan to allow life to go on but ensure that elderly people were protected. But then they abandoned that. And they weren't prepared for mass testing. but the main problem was that the government just didn't chart a clear course in this crisis — unlike the German government.”

The implications may soon become terrifyingly clear. UK infections are expected to peak by Easter Sunday.

Mr Johnson was slow to grip the coronavirus crisis. Evidence coming out of China about the disease in February was deemed unreliable and there was a hope it would burn itself out, like Sars in 2003.

Although Whitehall had started working up contingency plans from the start of 2020, the lack of urgency was summed up by Mr Johnson’s decision to disappear for a week in late February to his grace-and-favour Chevening home. It was only on March 2 that he chaired his first coronavirus emergency meeting.

At this point advisers were envisaging a spread of the virus through Britain — controlled by escalating social distancing measures — with a peak around mid-May to early-June. “Glastonbury should be all right,” one minister told anxious colleagues, referring to the world’s biggest music festival in late June.

Rather than following countries like South Korea in taking immediate draconian action to stop the disease — including the use of mass testing — Mr Johnson’s team thought a more modulated approach would ultimately save more lives and cause less economic harm.*

Patrick Vallance, the UK’s chief scientific adviser, found a willing ally in Dominic Cummings, Mr Johnson’s chief adviser, in embracing the concept of “herd immunity”, where the disease passed through healthy members of the population. Mr Cummings referred to the concept in a 2013 blog.

“There was an element of British exceptionalism to it,” said one Treasury official.*

Crucially during this time, Public Health England, a government agency, also advised that mass-testing was not feasible. Neil Ferguson, a professor at Imperial College and government adviser, told parliament it was “very clear from messages from PHE that we would have nowhere near enough testing capacity to adopt that strategy”.

Unlike Germany’s decentralised and at times unwieldy system, the UK chose to concentrate efforts in superlabs, in part to ensure reliability. Sharon Peacock of PHE said it was preferable to “dissipating our efforts into a lot of laboratories”. One senior academic said PHE struggled to delegate one of its core functions; the service had been “hanging around waiting for the next epidemic. That is what they are paid to do,” he said.

But in practice it meant that while Germany broadened its testing strategy to cover all those with mild symptoms — the core of a strategy to test, trace and isolate people infected with the virus — by March, Britain was struggling to scale up. The approach was narrowed to testing only hospital admissions. Only 5,000 of approx 500,000 frontline NHS workers had been tested by Thursday.*

Donald Trump was to say later that if Britain had persisted with the herd immunity approach it would have been “catastrophic”. But that had already become clear to Mr Johnson and his team by the weekend of March 14-15.

New data from Italy confirmed the disease was spreading faster than previously thought, with more patients ending up in intensive care units: Imperial College warned about 250,000 people would have died in the UK without a change of course. Worse still, ministers were advised that even if NHS intensive care capacity was doubled or trebled, it would be overwhelmed three times over.

Mr Hancock, Michael Gove, cabinet office minister, and Mr Cummings now urged Mr Johnson to put aside his libertarian instincts and effectively lock down Britain. “The three of them saw it immediately,” said one Number 10 official. Another official involved in the strategy change said: “When the facts change, you change your mind.”

Restrictions on social life lagged behind some of Germany’s states by a week or so, but the differences with Britain were less pronounced than with some other countries.

More consequential for Britain was the gaping flaw the strategy change exposed in Britain’s preparations. The only exit strategies from the lockdown appeared to be a vaccine or antiviral treatments — still thought to be many months away — or mass community testing to allow restrictions to be eased without triggering a second wave.*

“If you follow a herd immunity strategy, why would you not build treatment and testing capacity? That’s what puzzles me,” asked Devi Sridhar, professor of global health at Edinburgh University. “I think it is because they were taking everything from the flu playbook. In flu you don’t have to chase every case down, you don’t test in the community or medical staff . . . But coronavirus is not flu.”*

To expand treatment, Britain has already doubled its critical care bed capacity this month and aims to acquire up to 50,000 ventilators in total. Some 30 are due to arrive this weekend but 8,000 are expected in the next few weeks. But time is very short. Since the beginning of the outbreak Germany has amassed 10,000.*

Mr Johnson appealed to household names such as Airbus, Nissan, Dyson and McLaren to aid the effort. But some established medical equipment makers felt left in the cold. “They’ve overlooked the real manufacturers in the system,” said one person at a medical devices maker who asked not to be named. Ministers insist they have pursued all avenues, engaging with industry since February.

Blame over testing mis-steps is being directed by ministers at the NHS bureaucracy and PHE. “They’re proud of their independence and won’t yield for anyone,” said one minister of health officials. “The same is true for Public Health England: they’re the reason we don’t have more testing. They want to control the whole tedious process.”

For doctors a long way downstream from the decisions in Whitehall, the impression has overwhelmingly been one of dithering and delay caused by theoreticians being left to manage an emergency.*

“To us on the frontline, it feels like this is what happens when you let epidemiologists in charge of the real world,” said an NHS consultant from Hertfordshire on the Covid frontline. “What has never been explained to those working in respiratory care is why there wasn't 'test, test, test', then isolate, contact and trace again, which is the absolute basis of public health and infection control. Now they seem to have reacted, but it's all too late.”

All things that few if us on here have been saying for a while. Mustn't grumble though :mad:
 




SK1NT

Well-known member
Sep 9, 2003
8,741
Thames Ditton
I was forwarded a vid in a watsapp group earlier. This vid was from the daily mail website and was clearly posted to stoke up hate for the police and traffic wardens. The vid is a guy filming traffic wardens because he has received 5 tickets saying this is isolation. Are you key workers etc etc he is clearly angry for the 5 tickets he got for parking illegally. You would think the dopey idiot would have learnt after the second ticket. The guy is filming the wardens chatting to them about being outside etc. The wardens then call the police obviously they are a little worried how it may escalate. The guy then continues to film the 5 police officers that have turned up.

I didn’t remotely go down the route the daily mail would have liked me to. The vid to me shows a traffic warden doing their jobs for the guy illegally parking and a good number of police turning up because the guy was showing what could be threatening behaviour. Great.

However this hate mongering mail must be doing something right, the amount of people slagging off the police and the traffic wardens is unreal. Then a girl in my group says i totally disagree with my views.. Then continued to say i am parking illegally to be near my flat. She said she doesn’t want to walk far to her flat infecting people. This a girl who goes out jogging daily with different people that aren’t part of her family. I am baffled, what shall we do, let people park where they want? People are abusing what is a serious corona issue just to pick and choose the rules that suit them. Unreal. I thought this girls was a sensible person.
 


SK1NT

Well-known member
Sep 9, 2003
8,741
Thames Ditton
I was forwarded a vid in a watsapp group earlier. This vid was from the daily mail website and was clearly posted to stoke up hate for the police and traffic wardens. The vid is a guy filming traffic wardens because he has received 5 tickets saying this is isolation. Are you key workers etc etc he is clearly angry for the 5 tickets he got for parking illegally. You would think the dopey idiot would have learnt after the second ticket. The guy is filming the wardens chatting to them about being outside etc. The wardens then call the police obviously they are a little worried how it may escalate. The guy then continues to film the 5 police officers that have turned up.

I didn’t remotely go down the route the daily mail would have liked me to. The vid to me shows a traffic warden doing their jobs for the guy illegally parking and a good number of police turning up because the guy was showing what could be threatening behaviour. Great.

However this hate mongering mail must be doing something right, the amount of people slagging off the police and the traffic wardens is unreal. Then a girl in my group says i totally disagree with my views.. Then continued to say i am parking illegally to be near my flat. She said she doesn’t want to walk far to her flat infecting people. This a girl who goes out jogging daily with different people that aren’t part of her family. I am baffled, what shall we do, let people park where they want? People are abusing what is a serious corona issue just to pick and choose the rules that suit them. Unreal. I thought this girls was a sensible person.

Just had another girl in the group say we exercise together but we are 2 meters apart... and then actually said it's just a coincidence we keep meeting each other at the same point.... people are retarded.
 


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