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Maunder Minimum
03 April 2020 18:49:24

Just trawling through my back catalogue of emails to my MP.


I wrote to her on 7th February about border controls and port screening - I included the following:


"It is shocking that these passengers were not screened on return, or given leaflets and advice on what to do if they fall ill. "



  • that was what elicted that complacent response from the Home Office:


"The actions we are taking in response to the unprecedented threat from COVID-19 are in line with advice provided by the Department of Health and Social Care (DHSC) and Public Health England (PHE).  At present, we do not intend to introduce port screening measures such as temperature checks, as the scientific advice suggests that they simply do not work.   However, flights arriving from Category 1 countries have been subject to checks on board with the crew identifying passengers of concern.  Any passengers identified will have been subject to further health screening on arrival in the UK. 


 


During the containment phase, an enhanced monitoring process was implemented by PHE, to monitor direct flights and identify any ill passengers from affected countries.  On 12 March 2020, we moved from the containment phase to the delay phase.  This has been initiated as there is now community transmission of the virus in the UK, i.e. transmission not directly related to travel; so this has made interventions in ports of less relative importance.


..."


- they clearly had no clue what they were dealing with, but if Quantum and I could see the danger at the start of February, why couldn't they? Not closing borders and port screening arrivals was a dereliction of duty - if they had stopped people taking their half term breaks to go skiiing or for winter sun, it would have had far less impact on the economy than what is being experienced under a lock-down, plus many lives would have been spared serious illness or a fatal outcome.


New world order coming.
Brian Gaze
03 April 2020 18:50:59


 


Yes but if you think you had food poisoning and just a fever why would you think you had Corona virus?. I am talking about people with THE symptoms as being spelt out to us. UNCONTROLLABLE DRY COUGH, FEVER, FATIGUE and BREATHING PROBLEMS are the things to look out for. Now it is true I didn't notice fatigue or much breathlessness but many did from what I have read.


Originally Posted by: fairweather 


Hancock had a sore throat and a runny nose as I pointed out earlier. He tested positive for Corona virus. All I would say is there are clearly still unknowns about it. However, if it had been widespread a few months ago hospitals would have been filling up in a way that is only now happening. The Nightingale hospitals would have been needed well before now.


Brian Gaze
Berkhamsted
TWO Buzz - get the latest news and views 
"I'm not socialist, I know that. I don't believe in sharing my money." - Gary Numan
Bugglesgate
03 April 2020 18:59:49


 


Hancock had a sore throat and a runny nose as I pointed out earlier. He tested positive for Corona virus. All I would say is there are clearly still unknowns about it. However, if it had been widespread a few months ago hospitals would have been filling up in a way that is only now happening. The Nightingale hospitals would been needed well before now.


Originally Posted by: Brian Gaze 


The thing has a spectrum from no symptoms to death.  How do we know Hancock wasn't exhibiting no symptoms but at the same time got an unrelated throat infection ?


I'm also mystified by the contradicting option ranging from "it's spread like wildfire" to "it's difficult to catch and there was no evidence of it on surfaces in a house  with people infected".


 


 


 


Chris (It,its)
Between Newbury and Basingstoke
"When they are giving you their all, some stagger and fall, after all it's not easy banging your heart against some mad buggers wall"
Gandalf The White
03 April 2020 19:00:48


 


People in the UK are allowed to go out for exercise so why wouldn't they visit their local park?


Originally Posted by: westv 


Yes, that was my thought - social distancing in a park, breathing fresh air, is going to be orders of magnitude safer than shopping of any kind.


 


Location: South Cambridgeshire
130 metres ASL
52.0N 0.1E


Lionel Hutz
03 April 2020 19:02:09


 


Hancock had a sore throat and a runny nose as I pointed out earlier. He tested positive for Corona virus. All I would say is there are clearly still unknowns about it. However, if it had been widespread a few months ago hospitals would have been filling up in a way that is only now happening. The Nightingale hospitals would been needed well before now.


Originally Posted by: Brian Gaze 


Yes, you must be right that it can't have been widespread until March. The fact that the hospitals are only now filling up is a classic case of what lawyers call Res Ipsa Loquiter- the facts speak for themselves. Being a lawyer I just can't resist throwing in a Latin phrase or two😉


Lionel Hutz
Nr.Waterford , S E Ireland
68m ASL



doctormog
03 April 2020 19:02:24


 


Thanks for that, DrM. We used to have a nickname for such sloppy nonsense - we called it the "natural arbitrary line". Says it all. The other phrase sometimes used was "Which toe shall I shoot off?"


My wife keeps quoting that TV advert: "I don't know. Nobody knows..." 


I find it depressing that so many people are quite so ignorant of scientific facts, unaware that there is a scientific method and that prediction inevitably carries the possibility of being wrong - an valuable stepping stone to being right.  "I might be wrong" makes many folks uneasy. Happily, most weather-orientated folks are more than aware of that issue!


Roger


Originally Posted by: Roger Parsons 


Very nicely put Roger. 


Brian Gaze
03 April 2020 19:04:34


 


The thing has a spectrum from no symptoms to death.  How do we know Hancock wasn't exhibiting no symptoms but at the same time got an unrelated throat infection ?


I'm also mystified by the contradicting option ranging from "it's spread like wildfire" to "it's difficult to catch and there was no evidence of it on surfaces in a house  with people infected".


Originally Posted by: Bugglesgate 


That is a very good point actually. 


PS: Here's the first piece of genuinely good news I've seen wrt the UK outbreak. Hospital admissions in London have fallen in the last couple of days.  



Brian Gaze
Berkhamsted
TWO Buzz - get the latest news and views 
"I'm not socialist, I know that. I don't believe in sharing my money." - Gary Numan
Justin W
03 April 2020 19:07:53


Just trawling through my back catalogue of emails to my MP.


I wrote to her on 7th February about border controls and port screening - I included the following:


"It is shocking that these passengers were not screened on return, or given leaflets and advice on what to do if they fall ill. "



  • that was what elicted that complacent response from the Home Office:


"The actions we are taking in response to the unprecedented threat from COVID-19 are in line with advice provided by the Department of Health and Social Care (DHSC) and Public Health England (PHE).  At present, we do not intend to introduce port screening measures such as temperature checks, as the scientific advice suggests that they simply do not work.   However, flights arriving from Category 1 countries have been subject to checks on board with the crew identifying passengers of concern.  Any passengers identified will have been subject to further health screening on arrival in the UK. 


 


During the containment phase, an enhanced monitoring process was implemented by PHE, to monitor direct flights and identify any ill passengers from affected countries.  On 12 March 2020, we moved from the containment phase to the delay phase.  This has been initiated as there is now community transmission of the virus in the UK, i.e. transmission not directly related to travel; so this has made interventions in ports of less relative importance.


..."


- they clearly had no clue what they were dealing with, but if Quantum and I could see the danger at the start of February, why couldn't they? Not closing borders and port screening arrivals was a dereliction of duty - if they had stopped people taking their half term breaks to go skiiing or for winter sun, it would have had far less impact on the economy than what is being experienced under a lock-down, plus many lives would have been spared serious illness or a fatal outcome.


Originally Posted by: Maunder Minimum 


Yes borders should have been closed and testing and contact tracing initiated in January when it was clear to many of us what was coming.


But HMG’s record with the pandemic has been and continues to be catastrophic.


Yo yo yo. 148-3 to the 3 to the 6 to the 9, representing the ABQ, what up, biatch?
Maunder Minimum
03 April 2020 19:21:14


 


Yes borders should have been closed and testing and contact tracing initiated in January when it was clear to many of us what was coming.


But HMG’s record with the pandemic has been and continues to be catastrophic.


Originally Posted by: Justin W 


They are making up for lost time and trying to catch up with events, I can agree with you on that. But all western European countries made the same mistake, as did Trump's USA too.


I really don't know what they were thinking. Taiwan has always been the role model for me - if I had been in a position to make a difference, I would have stopped all cruise holidays in January and I would have stopped all flights to and from countries with a problem, with full port screening for everyone coming in.


But it would have made no difference on that topic who was in government - nobody in government or opposition was promoting such measures to my knowledge and as for the civil service blob - they spend too much time studying their own rectums as the shockingly complacent letter I received via my MP demonstrates..


 


New world order coming.
DEW
  • DEW
  • Advanced Member
03 April 2020 19:27:19


 


Same here in Croydon. Chavs hanging around in groups as normal, the coppers nowhere to be seen, but probably harassing a middle aged lady driving to a shop


The cops go for easy targets. They don't care if your house is burgled, but if you ignore a parking fine....


This country is finished. I know I always say that, but this time its true!


Originally Posted by: The Beast from the East 


Sussex Police are less forgiving. They broke up groups of youths in the centre of Eastbourne a couple of days ago and made sure the council had an anti-social behaviour order in place the next day.


War does not determine who is right, only who is left - Bertrand Russell

Chichester 12m asl
bowser
03 April 2020 19:34:43


 


The problem is that people who caught the virus early on, would most likely have been younger fitter people who had been travelling to Asia on business or holiday. If any of them caught the virus, it is quite likely it would have been missed - they may have been asymptomatic, or just had something they put down to a winter cold or the flu. The early cases which were uncovered, tended to be those who had passed on the infection to someone who then had a more serious reaction. So we will never know how many cases could have been in the country prior to the problem becoming all too apparent. But I think we are agreed that much more serious border controls should have been introduced weeks earlier with port screening measures in place.


I wrote the following to my MP on 6th March - I have not yet had a response:


"One of the important reasons for containing the outbreak is that China is interviewing all infected people nationwide about their contact persons and then test those. There are 1,800 teams in Wuhan to do this, each with at least 5 people. But the effort outside of Wuhan is also big. In Shenzhen, for example, the infected named 2,842 contact persons, all of whom were found, testing is now completed for 2,240, and 2.8% of those had contracted the virus. In Sichuan province, 25,493 contact persons were named, 25,347 (99%) were found, 23,178 have already been examined and 0.9% of them were infected. In the province of Guangdong, 9,939 contacts were named, all found, 7,765 are already examined and 4.8% of them were infected. That means: If you have direct personal contact with an infected person, the probability of infection is between 1% and 5%


 


This also correlates perfectly with Taiwan's response. They suspended links to China and they had to cook up their own system, which is close to this (I suspect the Chinese may have copied it, Taiwan did it in early January as the first in the world when they became suspicious of a viral outbreak in their neighbour).


 


Europe have messed up - they should have taken events in Italy very seriously from the outset and closed borders.


P.S. Taiwan really is the role model for how to deal with this."


Originally Posted by: Maunder Minimum 


Taiwan acted very early because they smelt a CCP rat. They were effectively ignored by the WHO too, early on.

xioni2
03 April 2020 19:38:40


 And for the 4th time ………….not enough drivers and not enough vans , there has been a 400% increase in demand ………..theory and practice Im afraid , tell me where the extra drivers and vans are coming from .


Its not rocket science , are you  expecting the logistics to be set in place ………….not going to happen


 

Originally Posted by: Gooner 


It's all academic anyway and the supermarkets probably know best, but adding many more drivers and vans should be feasible in a month or so esp if there is help from the govt.  It's not rocket science as you say. 


 

Maunder Minimum
03 April 2020 19:43:28


 


It's all academic anyway and the supermarkets probably know best, but adding many more drivers and vans should be feasible in a month or so esp if there is help from the govt.  It's not rocket science as you say. 


 


Originally Posted by: xioni2 


We live in a rural location with a supermarket in the nearest small town (Tenbury) - there is never an issue with not being able to keep apart from other people when we do our shopping, so that is what we shall do tomorrow. Last weekend, we did not even do that, since we had sufficient apart from a couple of items I was able to walk to the local store to obtain.


New world order coming.
DEW
  • DEW
  • Advanced Member
03 April 2020 19:44:04


 Yes, that was my thought - social distancing in a park, breathing fresh air, is going to be orders of magnitude safer than shopping of any kind.


 

Originally Posted by: Gandalf The White 


Depends on the park. There's a popular cycleway/footpath in Chichester (a converted old railway line)and it'll be crammed full over the weekend. I went there for my exercise two days ago, and it was well used even then. The tarmac strip is just about two metres wide.....


For weekend exercise I'm heading elsewhere in the city to a location which is much less well known (Havenstoke Park for those that know the city) but I shall return immediately if my guess is wrong.


War does not determine who is right, only who is left - Bertrand Russell

Chichester 12m asl
Ulric
03 April 2020 19:46:51

There are no rules any more.


 




To doubt everything or to believe everything are two equally convenient solutions; both dispense with the necessity of reflection. - Henri Poincaré
xioni2
03 April 2020 19:47:54


I've posted this before on here, elsewhere and even emailed some epidemiologist professors but I am still amazed that it generates little interest. I am talking about the extended dry continuous hacking cough that I had a the end of December that lasted three weeks accompanied by a short fever. Almost everybody round here had it and judging by what I keep reading on social media so did thousands if not millions of others from November onwards. Some even said they were hospitalised. I've never had  bronchitis or any other respiratory disease. People keep enmphasising no cold or flu symptoms. It crops up on every social media thread when Covid -19 Symptoms table is displayed.


Surely this should be subject of some research to eliminate it or otherwise. It was a massive event after all, before we had even heard of Corona virus.


Originally Posted by: fairweather 


Were this the same disease, then there would probably have been an anomalous surge in pneumonia cases in your area followed by a surge in the number of deaths. Obviously the disease was not known back then, but aren't hospitals being monitored for anomalous mortality? I think it's more likely to have been something else. 

Bugglesgate
03 April 2020 19:58:01


 


Depends on the park. There's a popular cycleway/footpath in Chichester (a converted old railway line)and it'll be crammed full over the weekend. I went there for my exercise two days ago, and it was well used even then. The tarmac strip is just about two metres wide.....


For weekend exercise I'm heading elsewhere in the city to a location which is much less well known (Havenstoke Park for those that know the city) but I shall return immediately if my guess is wrong.


Originally Posted by: DEW 


This is a good point and I noticed it today.  We have  a network of farm tracks   designated  as bridleways and  a lot of sunken lane footpaths.  I've had to "reverse ferret"  a considerable distance  to maintain 2M spacing over the last few days.  I intend to choose less popular times for my perambulations and choose  different routes. 


 


Chris (It,its)
Between Newbury and Basingstoke
"When they are giving you their all, some stagger and fall, after all it's not easy banging your heart against some mad buggers wall"
xioni2
03 April 2020 19:58:25


PS: Here's the first piece of genuinely good news I've seen wrt the UK outbreak. Hospital admissions in London have fallen in the last couple of days.  



Originally Posted by: Brian Gaze 


Yep, this is the single most important chart; let's hope this isn't just daily noise.

David M Porter
03 April 2020 20:01:20


Just trawling through my back catalogue of emails to my MP.


I wrote to her on 7th February about border controls and port screening - I included the following:


"It is shocking that these passengers were not screened on return, or given leaflets and advice on what to do if they fall ill. "



  • that was what elicted that complacent response from the Home Office:


"The actions we are taking in response to the unprecedented threat from COVID-19 are in line with advice provided by the Department of Health and Social Care (DHSC) and Public Health England (PHE).  At present, we do not intend to introduce port screening measures such as temperature checks, as the scientific advice suggests that they simply do not work.   However, flights arriving from Category 1 countries have been subject to checks on board with the crew identifying passengers of concern.  Any passengers identified will have been subject to further health screening on arrival in the UK. 


 


During the containment phase, an enhanced monitoring process was implemented by PHE, to monitor direct flights and identify any ill passengers from affected countries.  On 12 March 2020, we moved from the containment phase to the delay phase.  This has been initiated as there is now community transmission of the virus in the UK, i.e. transmission not directly related to travel; so this has made interventions in ports of less relative importance.


..."


- they clearly had no clue what they were dealing with, but if Quantum and I could see the danger at the start of February, why couldn't they? Not closing borders and port screening arrivals was a dereliction of duty - if they had stopped people taking their half term breaks to go skiiing or for winter sun, it would have had far less impact on the economy than what is being experienced under a lock-down, plus many lives would have been spared serious illness or a fatal outcome.


Originally Posted by: Maunder Minimum 


In my view, if the government had taken the actions that you suggest 2-3 months ago, it would very likely have made the task of trying to control the spread of the virus through the UK a bit easier to do that has proved to be the case. Doing so would have been no more than exercising a bit of plain old common sense.


Even if one accepts, as I think most people do, that it was never going to be possible to keep the virus out of the UK for the duration, it was surely incumbent on the government to do all they humanly could to mitigate the effect it would have on this country at the earliest opportunity. If the government had raised the alarm as soon as the first case of Covid-19 was diagnosed in England at the end of January and taken appropriate action at that time, we might, just might have been in a less bad place now.


Lenzie, Glasgow

"Let us not take ourselves too seriously. None of us has a monopoly on wisdom, and we must always be ready to listen and respect other points of view."- Queen Elizabeth II 1926-2022
Bugglesgate
03 April 2020 20:06:06


 


In my view, if the government had taken the actions that you suggest 2-3 months ago, it would very likely have made the task of trying to control the spread of the virus through the UK a bit easier to do that has proved to be the case. Doing so would have been no more than exercising a bit of plain old common sense.


Even if one accepts, as I think most people do, that it was never going to be possible to keep the virus out of the UK for the duration, it was surely incumbent on the government to do all they humanly could to mitigate the effect it would have on this country as much as they could as the earliest opportunity. If the government had raised the alarm as soon as the first case of Covid-19 was diagnosed in England at the end of January and taken appropriate action at that time, we might, just might have been in a less bad place now.


Originally Posted by: David M Porter 


If I remember rightly there  was a  lot of talk about herd immunity doing the rounds at that time i.e they wanted the thing to take off at a certain level to prevent "a second peak".  Haven't heard  herd immunity mentioned in the Govt daily briefings for a while now


Chris (It,its)
Between Newbury and Basingstoke
"When they are giving you their all, some stagger and fall, after all it's not easy banging your heart against some mad buggers wall"
pfw
  • pfw
  • Advanced Member
03 April 2020 20:28:02

Canadian report: just been for another walk. Social distancing still being well observed, but the sidewalks and roads are mainly quiet enough to make this easy. There's too much traffic on major roads for it all to be essential IMO but I didn't see any households obviously breaking the rules.


 


https://www.cbc.ca/news/canada/toronto/ontario-covid-projections-1.5519575


Ontario now predicting 3,000 to 15,000 deaths. Up to 2 years to be beat this. Without lock down they say it could have been 100,000 dead. More construction projects to be shut down. I think Ford has struck a reasonable tone so far. I'm not a fan of his by any means but if you are going to demand unprecedented things of the population you have to be straight with them about the figures and reasons. I've still got major concerns as there must be huge uncertainties in these figures, and there is no obvious end game yet, but far better to do this than adopt a hectoring tone on behaviour which can backfire.


https://www.cbc.ca/news/canada/toronto/toronto-outdoor-physical-distancing-1.5518998


Up to 5K fine for being to close to a stranger! I'm not sure about this - if you look at the second picture in the article above the two officials behind the mayor are closer than 2m - so that's 10K in the bag already . So far my own experience with physical distancing is that it feels unnatural - a bit like using the wrong hand to do household tasks, and if you don't concentrate, you forget. This doesn't excuse willful flouting but suggests to me that this may be over the top. Hopefully a bit of common sense enforcement will be all that we need.


--
Paul.
picturesareme
03 April 2020 21:01:45


 


If I remember rightly there  was a  lot of talk about herd immunity doing the rounds at that time i.e they wanted the thing to take off at a certain level to prevent "a second peak".  Haven't heard  herd immunity mentioned in the Govt daily briefings for a while now


Originally Posted by: Bugglesgate 


It might still be on the agenda but under the radar now as public opinions fuelled by the media and social media wouldn't be forgiving - these outlets are still pumping out worst case fear inducing crap. 


Current restrictions are buying up time to create more hospital facilities whilst allowing for a slower spread of the virus - its still being allowed to spread just at a slower rate. Also flu season is coming to an end, and the season for a lot of the other common respiratory virus are also beginning to slow so this will ease burdens on hospitals.


The reluctance to mass test now i believe is not only because of ability issues, but also a deliberate postponement. If they were to mass test now then the death/infected ratio would be much much lower and i believe this would make it harder for them justify the lock down restrictions as the press and social media would clock on. Such pressure to lift would not be a good thing whilst the NHS is still not ready to deal with this even if the death/infected rate was low as the health service would be swamped. 


Lets assume though that come May the death rate curve should be leavening off, and by then the government are ramping up tests into the 10's of thousands a day (anti body test hopefully), and its now that the true infected numbers begin to show. Its then that they maybe able to sell the easing of restrictions.

RobN
  • RobN
  • Advanced Member
03 April 2020 21:06:17


There are no rules any more.


 




Originally Posted by: Ulric 


The ugliness continues


Coronavirus: US 'wants 3M to end mask exports to Canada and Latin America'


https://www.bbc.co.uk/news/world-us-canada-52161032


 


Rob
In the flatlands of South Cambridgeshire 15m ASL.
CreweCold
03 April 2020 21:06:44


I've posted this before on here, elsewhere and even emailed some epidemiologist professors but I am still amazed that it generates little interest. I am talking about the extended dry continuous hacking cough that I had a the end of December that lasted three weeks accompanied by a short fever. Almost everybody round here had it and judging by what I keep reading on social media so did thousands if not millions of others from November onwards. Some even said they were hospitalised. I've never had  bronchitis or any other respiratory disease. People keep enmphasising no cold or flu symptoms. It crops up on every social media thread when Covid -19 Symptoms table is displayed.


Surely this should be subject of some research to eliminate it or otherwise. It was a massive event after all, before we had even heard of Corona virus.


Originally Posted by: fairweather 


I've been saying the same over on NW. I had the same thing. A persistent dry cough that lasted about a week. No upper tract symptoms at all. It started with slight fever, night chills and lethargy. Chest tightened over 24 hours, felt like it was full of gunk but nothing at all coming up. It was making me gag it was that bad.


Occurred the week between Christmas and new year.



Crewe, Cheshire
55 metres above sea level
Bugglesgate
03 April 2020 21:08:48


 


It might still be on the agenda but under the radar now as public opinions fuelled by the media and social media wouldn't be forgiving - these outlets are still pumping out worst case fear inducing crap. 


Current restrictions are buying up time to create more hospital facilities whilst allowing for a slower spread of the virus - its still being allowed to spread just at a slower rate. Also flu season is coming to an end, and the season for a lot of the other common respiratory virus are also beginning to slow so this will ease burdens on hospitals.


The reluctance to mass test now i believe is not only because of ability issues, but also a deliberate postponement. If they were to mass test now then the death/infected ratio would be much much lower and i believe this would make it harder for them justify the lock down restrictions as the press and social media would clock on. Such pressure to lift would not be a good thing whilst the NHS is still not ready to deal with this even if the death/infected rate was low as the health service would be swamped. 


Lets assume though that come May the death rate curve should be leavening off, and by then the government are ramping up tests into the 10's of thousands a day (anti body test hopefully), and its now that the true infected numbers begin to show. Its then that they maybe able to sell the easing of restrictions.


Originally Posted by: picturesareme 


 


That's a very good point.  It has to be the % of infected that die is a lot, lot lower than the % of hospital admissions  that die.  Those that rock up at hospital are already in serious trouble.  By contrast,  it has probably already ripped through the school age population with very little in the way of serious symptoms -  with the odd heart rending exception !


 


 


Chris (It,its)
Between Newbury and Basingstoke
"When they are giving you their all, some stagger and fall, after all it's not easy banging your heart against some mad buggers wall"

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