I am NOT okay with this. Nobody is expendable. It wouldn't be okay even if it were true. But it isn't. The truth is that many previously fit, healthy and productive people have died or become chronically ill from covid.and most of the people dying have more than one critical illness and are old enough that one can expect that they can die,
https://www.theguardian.com/comment...nd-coronavirus-covid-test-and-trace-teenagersBut that isn’t even the half of it. I’ve been talking to someone working on test and trace in a call centre subcontracted to Serco. I’ve confirmed their identity and job, but to protect their position, the worker wants to remain anonymous. Here’s what this person told me.
Until last week, the workers at the call centre were doing the simplest job in the tracing chain, calling those who have been identified as contacts of infected people and telling them to isolate themselves for 14 days, giving them some scripted advice and collecting a small amount of data. But last week, the call centre announced that all the workers on this contract were being “upskilled”. Instead of making these simple calls, they would now be calling infected patients and discovering all their contacts over the past fortnight. To use the official terms, they have suddenly been promoted from level 3 call handlers to level 2 clinical contact caseworkers.
I am NOT okay with this. Nobody is expendable. It wouldn't be okay even if it were true. But it isn't. The truth is that many previously fit, healthy and productive people have died or become chronically ill from covid.
Everyone here has had their lives ruined by ME, and we (rightly) expect society to do something. We (rightly) object when others try to minimse the seriousness of our condition by saying we're just a bit depressed or need to get out more. We should be the LAST people to be minimising the health problems of others, covid-related or non-covid related. Otherwise it makes us no better than the people we criticise on this forum.
I'm fine with people arguing the case for or against restrictions, but I am totally NOT okay with saying that those whose lives or health has been ruined by covid don't matter because most were on the way out anyway.
I've said it before, but I don't understand why people with a chronic condition such as ME argue that it's OK if people with a chronic condition, whether ME or not, die due to Covid-19 - don't they see that we here are all in that same group of people?I'm fine with people arguing the case for or against restrictions, but I am totally NOT okay with saying that those whose lives or health has been ruined by covid don't matter because most were on the way out anyway.
While many places around the world are hitting new highs in coronavirus cases, Taiwan has achieved a different kind of record - 200 days without a locally transmitted case.
Taiwan holds the world's best virus record by far and reached the new landmark on Thursday (Oct 29), even as the pathogen explodes anew in Europe and the United States.
Taiwan's last local case came on April 12; there has been no second wave.
https://www.straitstimes.com/asia/e...ith-no-local-cases-makes-taiwan-envy-of-world"Taiwan is the only major country that has so far been able to keep community transmission of Covid eliminated," said Dr Peter Collignon, an infectious disease physician and professor at the Australian National University Medical School.
Taiwan "probably had the best result around the world", he said, and it's "even more impressive" for an economy with a population about the same size as Australia's, with many people living close to one another in apartments.
Taiwan will be among the few economies to grow this year, with the government in August forecasting that the gross domestic product will expand 1.56 per cent in 2020.
There is absolutely no way that it would be safe for cancer patients to be treated at the moment. It would be insane to go to a hospital.
Because of responsibility for the whole?I've said it before, but I don't understand why people with a chronic condition such as ME argue that it's OK if people with a chronic condition, whether ME or not, die due to Covid-19 - don't they see that we here are all in that same group of people?
@Woolie
I am again sorry to say this, but the discussion is not about single cases, but on numbers, and you can only work to minimize damage. In this sense it´s a statistical problem. You can of course wish for golden societies (though I see it mere that our societies are still at risk, and this is not restricted to covid, if I am allowed to say my opinion as a citizen).
Because of responsibility for the whole?
The damage from short sighted views might extend the damage from long sighted view.
If you look at single cases and how bad it is, you miss your responsibility for the majority which one´s people you cannot all visit with your compassion.
https://www.bbc.co.uk/news/health-54723962Nearly 100,000 people are catching coronavirus every day in England, a major analysis suggests.
The study, by Imperial College London, says the pace of the epidemic is accelerating and estimates the number of people infected is now doubling every nine days.
The authors say we are at a "critical stage" and "something has to change".
France and Germany have turned to forms of lockdown to control the virus.
Communities Secretary Robert Jenrick told BBC Breakfast the government wanted to "try to avoid having a national blanket approach" to coronavirus restrictions in England, where a regional three-tier alert system is in place.
I am astonished to read this, although I am not an expert.I do not remember a single case of flu being admitted and given emergency care.
And this is then is not the case with covid, which was said several times that it especially affects ppl with more than one serious morbidity? Also the age is more advanced in covid deaths than in flu deaths, when also young ppl occasionally die from flu, if I havn´t dreamed the information. I admit that the situation may not already have been evaluated throughout. Being carefully, I say again that I don´t say that we wouldn´t have a problem or that one should ignore the virus.Yes, there are figures for increased deaths in winter months but I am not sure that anyone actually has figures for the number of deaths from flu. If it is really true that 10,000 people die each year from fluid the UK (for instance) then I think we have to assume that pretty much ALL of these cases are people who are already considered to be terminally ill or have no realistic hope of survival of more than a few months.
This would be somehow nice, if would be that easy and would be correct, wouldn´t it?The idea that only those on the brink of death anyway are dying from covid is simply incorrect.
There is absolutely no way that it would be safe for cancer patients to be treated at the moment. It would be insane to go to a hospital.
https://www.spectator.co.uk/article/the-long-winter-why-covid-restrictions-could-last-until-aprilThat’s why The Spectator is publishing a document which the government has not until now acknowledged the existence of: the ‘reasonable worst-case scenario’ for this coming winter. The document is on our website and makes for grim reading: 85,000 dead from a new Covid wave, about a third more than have died so far. It envisages 356,000 heading for hospital. Deaths are expected to peak at a lower rate than the first wave — but what is very different, this time, is the duration. The second wave is expected to get steadily worse until March.
The Sage document starts with an important caveat: it’s a hypothesis, not a prediction. The clue is in the name: a ‘worst-case planning scenario’ is not the most likely outcome. But as it says, under the UK system, this is the basis on which plans are being made. The document, published on 30 July, explains why lockdown measures were never properly relaxed. It also explains why ministers are so worried. If its forecasts are even half-right, we’re not remotely close to the end of the Covid story. While Swedes regard Covid as a near-exhausted enemy, the Brits see a monster ready to strike even harder as soon as normal life resumes. Which is why there’s no rush to resume normal life.
Since FHM and the government removed the recommendations for risk groups, local governments have started removing support too. For example, in my town the grocery shops are no longer offering home delivery. I'm devastated.Cases keep climbing, but today Sweden loosens restrictions even furtherThis is a big one.